Steve Jobs (2015) 8.5/10Great writing. Probably Sorkin's finest work, especially on structure. It's a shame Fincher wasn't around this time to refocus the film on Jobs' achievements and actual work rather than on his family issues. I was never a fan of Boyle, but the guy is inventive and really managed to add emotion to that cold huis-clos.
The Cincinnati Kid - 7/10 - Steve McQueen as New Orleans card shark, Edward G. Robinson as his archnemesis, Karl Malden and Rip Torn as heels, Tuesday Weld and Ann-Margaret as eye candy. Modestly entertaining.
It's a shame we never got to see what Sam Peckinpah could have done with this. Apparently it was originally envisioned as a take on the Western - hence the Western sounding name of "The Cincinnati Kid" and the idea to have Peckinpah at the helm. At least Peckinpah was able to work with Steve McQueen on two other films.
(everything in yellow is a direct quote from the book)8 ) pp. 88-89: RE: The Spirit of St Louis, Wilder bemoans the fact that, "I could not get in a little deeper, into Lindbergh's character. There was a wall there. We were friends, but there were many things I could not talk to him about. It was understood – the picture had to follow the book. The book was immaculate. It had to be about the flight only. Not about his family, about the daughter, the Hauptmann thing, what happened after the flight... just the flight itself." I'm surprised Wilder, a Jew who lost 3/4 of his family in Auschwitz, was friends with the Nazi-loving Lindbergh.As one example of a story Wilder could not put into the movie, Wilder confided that he heard a story from newspapermen who were in Long Island with Lindbergh the night before he was to take off on his famous flight. The newspapermen "told me a little episode that happened there, and that would have been enough to make this a real picture.The episode was that Lindbergh was waiting for the clouds to disappear - the rain and the weather had to be perfect before he took off. There was a waitress in a little restaurant there. She was young, and she was very pretty. And they come to her and said, "Look, this young guy there, Lindbergh, sweet, you know, handsome.... (His plane is) going to be a flying coffin, full of gas, and he's not going to make it. But we come to you for the following reason. The guy has never been laid. Would you do us a favor, please. Just knock on the door, because the guy cannot sleep...."So she does it. And then, at the very end of the picture, when there's the parade down Fifth Avenue, millions of people, and there is the girl standing there in the crowd. She's waving at him. And he doesn't see her. She waves her hand at him, during the ticker-tape parade, the confetti raining down. He never sees her. He's God now. This would be, this alone would be, enough to make the picture. Would have been a good scene. That's right – would have been a good scene. But I could not even suggest it to him.[Wilder mentioned several times throughout the book how he would have loved to put that episode in the movie, eg. p. 90: ... And just that girl, who we'd see again at the very end. And you fade out on that [Wistfully:] That would have made the whole picture.After Wilder said there's no way he could have even mentioned asked Lindbergh about filming this episode, Crowe asks, "Couldn't you have had your producer bring it up?" Wilder responds:No. Absolutely not. They would have withdrawn the book or something. "There you go, Hollywood, out of here!" I don't know - very tough guy, very tough guy. I know, because I pulled jokes on him. One day when we were flying to Washington, Charles Lindbergh and I, we were going to the Smithsonian Institution to see the real Spirit of St. Louis, which we had duplicated. Hanging off the ceiling, it's there. And we were in a plane flying to Washington, and it's very very rough, so I turned to him and I said, "Charles, wouldn't it be fun if this plane now crashed, can you see the headlines? – LUCKY LINDY IN CRASH WITH JEWISH FRIEND!" And he said, Oh, no no no, don't talk like this!"
So I just spent 2 weeks of vacation in Thailand and as usual I used the extended flight time to watch the films I have missed over the past year:The Big Short - cool, great acting, populist, but not everybody can be Fincher/Scorsese 6/10Deadpool - fun, sometimes boring 6/10Spectre - I don't get why everybody was disappointed, it's more or less like Skyfall although the humor and the action sequences are better done 6/10Steve jobs - (second viewing) still 8.5/10, I'll buy the BD as soon as possibleCreed - well done, some good characters and a few surprisingly effective scenes, terrible main character 5/10Trumbo - pointless but professionally done 5/10Spotlight - amazing acting (mark Ruffalo's best work so far?), good dialogues, interesting story, I really don't like the direction 6.5/10
Higher.Higher.Stay.Lower.Higher.Higher.Lower.