Showing posts with label Henry Jaglom. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Henry Jaglom. Show all posts

6/20/2009

Movie Review: Irene in Time (2009)





Tanna Frederick & Writer/Director Henry Jaglom's
First Collaboration Since Hollywood Dreams






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Although my first viewing of the film was fascinating to say the least, it wasn't until after I hit eject that I discovered that like a song that gets stuck in your head, Irene in Time will continue dancing there long after the final reel.



Of course, it remains true to Jaglom's par-for-the-course decision at times to push for confrontational and searing examinations of tremendously flawed individuals via performances that go way beyond the natural and flow into exaggerated Fellini meets Cassavetes terrain to drive his theses home. However, overall the work is an engrossing exploration of emotional time where the enigmatic clues move back and forth like waves on the ocean he always seems to capture in the distance throughout the movie. And to this end, it's one where the final act will occur after the last piece of celluloid has flickered from view whether it's in the cup-of-coffee, drive home, or your walk towards the parking lot.



A challenging cinematic offering that works infinitely better in retrospect when you can piece it all together and one that is best appreciated with another and much closer look-- my reaction to Time was cemented the following day when I shared the screener from Jaglom's Rainbow Films with another.



For now with the film still fresh in my mind and the ability to plunge deeper into it as I could move beyond the overwhelming central character, I was astounded by the previously subtle narrative repetitions in dialogue and plot as I dissected it with the other viewer. While they had an understandably hard time accepting the characterization of our sensitive yet unspeakably immature central heroine who's still hung up on the father who'd vanished into the sea when she was a girl-- since I'd already been able to accept that and narrow my focus instead on the heartrending mystery, suddenly I realized that there may be much more going on in the movie than initially meets the eye.

Intriguingly described as "a puzzle about love and time, a mystery in which clues are found and secrets are revealed," in the film's synopsis-- it's this unique word choice in the description that helped tip off the underpinnings of Time as a magic realism tinged work of heightened emotion. Likewise, the title in itself is revealing since indeed time is at the heart of Henry Jaglom’s emotional puzzle which will linger long after it’s over.

The most recent work from independent writer/director Henry Jaglom which is fittingly opening on Father's Day in limited release to tie in with its central theme of the complexities and lasting effects of father/daughter relationships reunites Jaglom with his beguiling muse-- the theatrically trained valedictorian from the University of Iowa, Ms. Tanna Frederick.

And although it will not mark their last collaboration as Frederick revealed to me in a recent interview that she's working with Jaglom on a "Margie" trilogy that will chronicle the ups-and-downs of her A Star is Born meets All About Eve ingenue from their previous partnership, with this film we realize that Tanna Frederick’s Hollywood Dreams continue to keep us captivated with her passionate and fearless turn in Time.



Similar to Margie, the titular character of Irene who is told she comes "from a long line of narcissists" is out of touch with reality. However, whereas Margie seemed extremely driven and willing to sacrifice everything for her Roxie Hart like ambition, Irene is still a fragile child utterly trapped (but intriguingly happy with her imprisonment since she can escape into the past) inside the body of a thoroughly confused adult.





While when the movie begins with a series of stories about her father from the friends of his she's adopted as family in a codependent need to be irrationally closer to the first man who'd loved her and the first one who'd left her, Irene is left with insatiable appetite to learn more about the father she considered magical who used to pull her out of school with various excuses and take her on adventures.



However, although there are a number of things abut Irene's father we do not understand, we do immediately realize that he made Irene the center of his universe. While on the one hand this let him escape from his true reality of gambling, impulsive action and deception, on the other it also left Irene with an unrealistic memory of her father whom she's held up as a hero via an imaginary measuring stick that no one can quite live up to much to the detriment of her relationships with the opposite sex.



Similar to a child making the acquaintance of a new friend-- for an aspiring singer working on her album, the twenty-something Irene avoids the Hollywood trappings of celebrity name-dropping by instead name-dropping her father and stories of him to anyone willing to listen for more than five seconds at a time.



And this is quickly ascertained over a series of failed dates and false starts to would-be relationships and Irene's decision to gamble her heart on men the way her father gambled on horses which is exacerbated by her over-reliance on self-help dating manuals which offer conflicting advice. Likewise despite Frederick's beaming smile and penchant for making us want to reach through the celluloid and protect her-- via Irene's extremes-- the film threatens to drown its great ideas and Jaglom's obsession with father/daughter dynamics and questions of love and time that tests the patience and good will of audience members.

To use one example, in a particularly abysmal date where Irene comes on far too strongly in trying to display an over-abundance of enthusiasm in the man's livelihood of building mini-malls-- he finally asks her, "what's wrong with you?" before leaving the restaurant with the citation that he's just uncomfortable. And sadly-- although we feel for Irene-- for a moment we wish we'd wandered outside the restaurant with him as we couldn't agree more and hoped that Frederick's character could have been a bit closer to Earth.



It's further evidenced particularly in the scenes Frederick shares with Jaglom's precocious children who offer Irene advice on romance and even a prediction that she will soon be lucky enough to be granted a wish. And in the precious two moments, we sense that emotionally she has more in common with the children (and in fact tragically we grasp that they're a few steps ahead of her) than she does with most women or men her age.



Thus ultimately we question Jaglom's direction of Frederick until he finally manages to plant the seeds in our brain that perhaps there's something else happening in Irene in Time than we realize, given the comments he writes in his directorial statement as shares that movies like Portrait of Jennie, A Guy Named Joe, Stairway to Heaven and Here Comes Mr. Jordan were used for inspiration.



And when you couple this question of love and time and emotional clues that are revealed when Irene discovers more information about her father along with the way her character seems to be reliving or playing out some similar situations that had occurred in the relationships of her father, her mother (Victoria Tennant) and a mysterious lounge singer (Andrea Marcovicci)-- the film suddenly takes on a different quality of magic realism and fate vs. destiny that can lead to various interpretations on what is reality and what is fantasy.



Again, like most of Jaglom's movies, Irene in Time is one that intentionally avoids the straightforward, crowd-pleasing structures of most summer fodder. Additionally, previous knowledge of Jaglom's style will infinitely help a viewer first tackling the work. And in the end I must admit to a strong aversion in places to the overly heightened characterization of Irene and my wish that Jaglom had granted Frederick the freedom to play someone a bit less neurotic to avoid "Margie" comparisons since this subject matter deserved a more delicate approach.



Still, viewing it with the magic realism idea in mind and with particular attention to the repetition in the past and present of Irene and the characters in her life nonetheless make the film a fascinating conversational piece that you may find stays with you much longer than the ninety-five minute running time.

Henry Jaglom


10/03/2008

Henry Jaglom's Films Available on iTunes




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First famous for his editing contributions to Easy Rider, the British born and Actors Studio trained actor/editor turned writer/director Henry Jaglom has dedicated several of his cinematic creations since his feature filmmaking debut in 1971 to exploring the many issues surrounding women and men in contemporary society.

His most recent film, Hollywood Dreams, offered a phenomenal role for its lead actress Tanna Frederick and was featured as an Official Selection at our very own Scottsdale International Film Festival, which incidentally kicks off tonight.

Nearly a dozen of the groundbreaking, experimental, and acclaimed independent filmmaker's classic works starring such notable performers as Orson Welles, Vanessa Redgrave and Dennis Hopper have been made available for the digital generation as iTunes feature length downloads, which you can learn more about below.



Tracks (1976)
Starring Dennis Hopper, Taryn Power, Dean Stockwell.
Introducing Michael Emil and Zack Norman.
With Topo Swope, Alfred Ryder, Barbara Flood
and Richard Romanus (International Rainbow Pictures).
Tracks



Sitting Ducks (1980)
Starring Michael Emil & Zack Norman. Introducing Patrice Townsend.
With Irene Forrest, Richard Romanus. And Henry Jaglom
(International Rainbow Pictures/United Film Distribution).
Sitting Ducks



Can She Bake a Cherry Pie? (1983)
Starring Karen Black and Michael Emil. With Michael Margotta, Frances Fisher, Martin Harvey Friedberg, Robert Hallak, Larry David
(International Rainbow Pictures/Castle Hill).
Can She Bake a Cherry Pie?



Always (But Not Forever) (1985)
Starring Henry Jaglom and Patrice Townsend.
With Alan Rachins, Joanna Frank, Melissa Leo, Jonathan Kaufer, Andre Gregory, Michael Emil, Amnon Meskin, Bud Townsend and Bob Rafelson (Jagfilms/Samuel Goldwyn Co.).
Always



Someone to Love (1987)
Starring Orson Welles, Henry Jaglom, Sally Kellerman, Andrea Marcovicci and Michael Emil.
Introducing Dave Frishberg and Stephen Bishop.
With Oja Kodar, Ronee Blakley, Kathryn Harrold, Monte Hellman, Barbara Flood
(International Rainbow Pictures/Castle Hill).
Someone to Love



New Year’s Day (1989)
Starring Henry Jaglom, David Duchovny and Maggie Wheeler.
With Gwen Welles, Harvey Miller, Irene Moore, James DePreist, Michael Emil, Robert Hallak, Katherine Wallach. And Milos Forman
(Jagfilms/Rainbow Releasing).
New Year's Day



Eating (1991)
Starring Mary Crosby, Frances Bergen, Gwen Welles, Lisa Richards.
Introducing Nelly Alard. With Marlena Giovi, Daphna Kastner, Marina Gregory, ElizabethKemp, Beth Grant, Savannah Smith Boucher, Taryn Power
(Jagfilms/Rainbow Releasing).
Eating



Venice/Venice (1992)
Starring Henry Jaglom and Nelly Alard. With Suzanne Bertish, Daphna Kastner, Melissa Leo, David Duchovny. And Suzanne Lanza, Diane Salinger, Marshall Barer, Zack Norman.
And John Landis
(Jagfilms/Rainbow Releasing).
Venice/Venice


View the Trailer Below




Babyfever (1994)
Introducing Victoria Foyt. With Frances Fisher, Matt Salinger, Dinah Lenney, Zack Norman, Elaine Kagan, Eliza Roberts, Charlayne Woodward, Tracy Swope.
And Eric Roberts.
(A Jagtoria Film/Rainbow Releasing).
Babyfever



Déjà Vu (1998)
Starring Stephen Dillane, Victoria Foyt and Vanessa Redgrave.
With Glynis Barber, Michael Brandon, Vernon Dobtcheff, Graydon Gould, Noel Harrison, Aviva Marks, Anna Massey. And Rachel Kempson
(A Jagtoria Film/Revere Entertainment/Rainbow Releasing).
Déjà Vu


View the Trailer Below




Hollywood Dreams (2008)
Starring Tanna Frederick and Justin Kirk.
With Zack Norman, David Proval, Melissa Leo, Karen Black, Kim Kolarich and Keaton Simons. And Eric Roberts and Jon Robin Baitz.
Hollywood Dreams


View the Trailer Below




Read the Film Intuition Review of Hollywood Dreams




5/20/2008

Hollywood Dreams

Director:
Henry Jaglom

“Mmmm, I'm a star
And the audience loves me
And I love them
And they love me for loving them
And I love them for loving me
And we love each other
And that's because none of us
Got enough love in our childhoods
And that's showbiz, kid.” – “Roxie Hart” from Chicago

In her pitch perfect screen performance as Roxie Hart in the Academy Award Winning musical Chicago, Renee Zellweger played the ultimate ingénue—the quintessential star-hungry dreamer whose ambition was equally matched with her willingness to do whatever it takes to secure her fifteen minutes of fame. While in the 1920’s era Chicago, Roxie Hart’s path led her to murder, the tireless character of a young, wide-eyed hopeful girl much too eager to see her name in lights has been a favorite in Hollywood for years. Whether it’s depicted in All About Eve or in network television’s newest crop of reality programming, the recurring premise of an ambitious talent taps directly into our celebrity driven culture of a contemporary society which seems as equally dependent on gossip as we are on gasoline.

In writer/director Henry Jaglom’s latest film, we’re presented with another aspiring star, who-- and equally fitting to the archetype-- has arrived in Hollywood from small town Mason City, Iowa known to most in Tinseltown as the setting of Broadway’s The Music Man. With an encyclopedic knowledge for classic Hollywood trivia and dialogue and not above bursting into tears at an audition or fainting on cue to gain sympathy, there is something distinctly similar to Roxie Hart embodied in actress Tanna Frederick’s portrayal of Jaglom’s heroine Margie Chizek.

While we realize that she isn’t likely to resort to murder, Margie’s delusional behavior and tendency towards mania makes her an unlikely main character with whom the audience can legitimately sympathize. Even after she’s kicked out of her latest living situation for destroying the microwave, we’re always convinced (although we’re not sure she’s deserving) that she will not only land on her feet but she just may become a star and her big break appears in the form not of a knight in shining armor but in Kaz (Zack Norman) a gay film producer walking his dog in the park. Feeling sorry for Margie, he takes her to lunch only to realize he’s been hustled but he’s so convinced that her ability to lie will translate to an innate ability to perform that he sets her up in his guest home, promising he will eventually make her a star. With her other newfound benefactor, Kaz’s partner Caesar (an excellent David Proval), Margie’s Hollywood Dreams begin to come true but soon love unexpectedly enters the mix when she begins falling for the other occupant of the guest home, Robin (Justin Kirk).

Although warned that when it comes to Robin, he’s “S.B.O.” (“Strictly Boys Only”), the two seem to naturally gravitate to one another with near magnetic force as Margie starts realizing that in modern day Hollywood where the rules have been changed, Robin may only be pretending to be gay to garner more niche work. However lying about one’s orientation may not be the worst of the secrets flying throughout as every member of Kaz’s circle seems to have enough baggage to crash a jet plane.

While Robin’s storyline seems to be the most fascinating one in Jaglom’s overcrowded screenplay, especially when played to such charismatic heights by the impressive Justin Kirk, far too much time is spent fixating on Margie, who, much like Roxie Hart is fascinating enough to ensure interest for fifteen minutes of fame but ultimately not worthy of building an entire production around, despite the daring tenacity and fierce determination brought to the role by the fearless Frederick.

4/23/2007

Going Shopping

Director: Henry Jaglom

First famous for his editing contributions to Easy Rider, actor/editor turned writer/director Henry Jaglom has dedicated several of his cinematic creations in the last dozen years to exploring the many issues surrounding women in contemporary society. In his latest film, co-written by and starring his wife Victoria Foyt, Jaglom uncovers the obsession and catharsis (as well as the problems) of women’s devotion to shopping. Part docudrama, part-fiction, Foyt stars as Holly Gilmore, a dress-designer who finds out that Holly G’s, the store she’s run for ten years will be closing within a few days after her money-manager boyfriend mishandles her finances. Set during the economically busy weekend of Mother’s Day, Gilmore uses those three days to desperately try to come up with back rent, pay for more merchandise and deal with not only the dissolution of her relationship (as well as a chance encounter with attractive stranger Rob Morrow) but the lives and loves of the other women in her life including her well-intentioned but misguided mother and teenage daughter (Mae Whitman). Whether she’s trying to secure a loan shark, lure a new business partner or resolve the many personal crises that arise, Gilmore tries to keep everything together as director/editor Jaglom intercuts fascinating interviews with various customers that in some ways enrich the plot and fascinate viewers but at certain moments, detract from the drama and take away from the overall effect. However, the film is worth a look—fresh, creative and addicting as shopping itself.