Thursday, May 29, 2025
Pee-wee as Himself
There is both an immediate intimacy and sadness when a close up of Paul Reubens' face appears on screen. We lost the actor from cancer in 2023 and this posthumous documentary is like receiving a letter from a dead friend. This is a portrait of a man who kept secrets - the documentary filmmakers didn't even know he was dying. It's looking over everything, a reflection of a life lived, and laying it out warts and all. I found it to be fascinating. For example, did you know that Paul Reubens was in the same theatre group as Cassandra Peterson (Elvira) and Phil Hartman? Hartman was on Pee-wee's Playhouse before leaving for SNL. Laurence Fishburne was also a Pee-wee Playhouse regular. Like I said, fascinating. Reubens himself was as ambitious as Joan Rivers - he gave up a lot and pushed himself back into the closet for the sake of a career. He became one of the biggest and most recognizable stars of the 1980s. Pee-wee Herman was huge. Then it came all crashing down. It's an intimate portrait and as an artist and a collector of stuff, I felt I could relate to a lot of it. I found it to be very moving. Both melancholy and inspiring. One of the best celebrity documentaries I've seen. Catch it streaming on HBO.
Wednesday, May 7, 2025
Gimme Shelter
Stage security at rock concerts seems to have come a long, long way since 1969. But then again, do we have outdoor concerts with 300,000 people anymore? "Gimme Shelter" is a 1970 documentary about the 1969 Rolling Stones concert at the Altamont Speedway in sunny California. It was a free concert and people thought it might be a companion bookend to Woodstock from early that year. The Hells Angels were hired as security for the show. When I was a young man, I read "The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test" and Hunter Thompson's "Hell's Angels." I was fascinated with this period of American history - mostly the story of LSD and how it came to affect so much of the culture. It surprises me that I only got around to watching this documentary now. It's a fascinating time capsule. It's also a horror movie. The Rolling Stones were at the height of their popularity and fans were ravenous to see them, touch them physically if possible. The film starts with Mick Jagger watching footage of his band performing at Madison Square Garden, during which three individuals, fans, rush the stage to touch, hug, or somehow engage physically with the band - all three within minutes of each other. Mick and the boys kept playing. Scary for them. What's even scarier? Hells Angels. As I said, this is a horror movie. People tripping out of their gourds, stoned to the hilt on LSD and/or mushrooms, zombie-like march towards the stage, some of them naked. It's "It Follows" but for real. There is a terrifying scene where Mick is singing on stage and beside him is a man who looks like he is transforming into a zombie or werewolf - high as a loon. I watched in complete horror. From the start you know there is a death coming and the whole film is filled with dread. Both riveting and horrifying, one of the most fascinating rock documentaries you will see. Watch it on the Criterion Channel or go rent it in Ottawa from Movies 'N Stuff.
Monday, May 5, 2025
A Boy and His Dog
Set in the year 2024, based on a novella by Harlan Ellison, and released in 1975, "A Boy and His Dog" has been a film on my to-watch list for many years. Alex Garland, I maintain, has a working thesis, a theme if you will, that men are violent, sex-crazed animals. Enter Don Johnson ("Miami Vice" heartthrob of the 80s) in one of his earliest roles as Vic, a violent, sex-crazed nomad living in a post-apocalyptic, post WW IV world. He has a companion, a dog, Blood (voiced by Tim McIntire) with whom with he communicates telepathically. Blood is actually smarter than Vic. Blood helps sniff out females for Vic so he can rape these women. It's dark and disturbing but the talking dog keeps it seemingly light (something out of "The Cat from Outer Space" playbook). In "A Boy and His Dog" the scavengers live in a desert wasteland, with faux generals and makeshift barter towns where guns are checked at the door. The entire look of the film is "Mad Max" four years prior to "Mad Max" and six years prior to "Mad Max 2 - The Road Warrior." The rest of the world lives underground in nuclear fallout bunkers. Jason Robards plays the leader of the clown underworld and lures Vic down for breeding purposes. Reasons to watch: 1) Don Johnson gives such a great performance you believe he is communicating with the dog. 2) Mad Max fans will be enlightened and entertained. 3) Looking at the future from the perspective of the past - what does a possible 2024 look like in 1975. 4) The Dog - he is adorable and very funny.
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