Year of Release: 1994
Director: Spike Lee
Screenplay: Joie Susannah Lee, Cinque Lee and Spike Lee, based on a story by Joie Susannah lee
Starring: Alfre Woodward, Delroy Lindo, Zelda Harris, Spike Lee
Running Time: 115 minutes
Genre: Drama, comedy, coming of age
This semi-autobiographical directed by Spike Lee, and co-written by Lee and his siblings, Cinque and Joie Susannah. The film is set over the spring and summer of 1973 in a tough but close-knit neighbourhood in Brooklyn, New York, and focuses on nine year old Troy Carmichael (Harris) growing up with four rowdy brothers and her troubled by loving parents: Strict school teacher Carolyn (Woodward), who holds the family together, and ambitious but naive musician Woody (Lindo), who had some success with pop music covers in the past but now wants to concentrate exclusively on his own music.
The film is colourful, lively and is unusually light for a Spike Lee film, however there is still plenty of grit. The neighbourhood is populated with eccentric characters, children play on the stoops and the street, everyone knows what is going on with everyone else and more often than not look out for each other, but it is tough, and there is always a threat of violence, although having said that, it's more likely to be a light punch rather than a gunshot. The film is visually inventive. Troy goes to stay with relatives in the South, which she finds very disturbing and disorientating, and these scenes are filmed in widescreen without anamorphically adjusting the image, which gives it a strange elongated look. The performances are great, Alfre Woodward, Delroy Lindo and Zelda Harris are all superb, and the Carmichael family do feel like a real family, and your left wondering what happens to them after the film. Spike Lee has a part as the neighbourhood glue sniffer Snuffy. It's a loose film, without a strong plot, and feels quite baggy and episodic. It's warm, funny, gritty and real, with a fantastic soundtrack of early '70s soul music.
Zelda Harris and Delroy Lindo in Crooklyn
Showing posts with label Cinque Lee. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cinque Lee. Show all posts
Saturday, 4 May 2019
Crooklyn
Labels:
Alfre Woodward,
Cinque Lee,
comedy,
coming of age,
Crooklyn,
Delroy Lindo,
drama,
Joie Susannah Lee,
movies,
reviews,
Spike Lee,
Zelda Harris
Monday, 22 August 2016
Mystery Train
Year of Release: 1989
Director: Jim Jarmusch
Screenplay: Jim Jarmusch
Starring: Youki Kudoh, Masatoshi Nagase, Screamin' Jay Hawkins, Cinque Lee, Nicoletta Braschi, Elizabeth Bracco, Rick Aviles, Joe Strummer, Steve Buscemi,
Running Time: 113 minutes
Genre: comedy-drama
This film collects three separate but connected stories, all set during the same 24 hour period in Memphis, Tennessee, linked by a run-down hotel, a single gunshot and the legacy of Elvis Presley. A teenage Japanese couple visit Memphis on a rock 'n' roll pilgrimage, Mitsuko (Kudoh) is crazy about the King, while Jun (Nagase) is more of a Carl Perkins man. A young Italian widow, Luisa (Braschi), is stranded in Memphis during an unexpected 24 hour layover while escorting her husband's body back to Italy. A hapless barber, Charlie (Buscemi), is unwittingly involved in a liquor store robbery by his drunk, English brother-in-law (Strummer).
This is a slow, melancholy movie. It's funny but it is comedy of the most deadpan sort. Jarmusch once commented that he makes films out of the parts that other directors cut out, and this really feels like that. It's a film full of long pauses, meandering conversations and long sequences of characters wandering around. It is strangely affecting and haunting though. The stories with the Japanese couple and the Italian widow capture the feeling of being in a strange city, far from home, and the story about the barber features one of the best scenes of drunkenness on film. The story with the barber is probably the most mainstream segment, and is Tarantinoesque before Quentin Tarantino, including a conversation about Lost in Space that could almost have been written by Tarantino. The stories are connected by scenes with Screamin' Jay Hawkins as the night manager of the hotel and Cinque Lee as a porter, who provide some of the film's funniest moments, with Hawkins being able to bring the laughs and express so much with just one look. There are some great performances from Kudoh, Nagase and Braschi. Buscemi's put-upon barber and Strummer's aggressive Brit are hilarious together. Music is ever present in the film, Elvis Presley is referenced in all three of the stories, the Japanese couple are fascinated by American rock 'n' roll, and there are several musicians in the cast: Soul singer Screamin' Jay Hawkins, Joe Strummer who was frontman for British rock group The Clash, and Tom Waits lends his gravely tones as the voice of a late-night radio DJ.
Jarmusch's brand of cool, deadpan whimsy won't appeal to everyone. It is slow and not much happens for a lot of the film, but it is one of Jarmusch's most accessible films and the epitome of American indie cool. If you think you might have a taste for underground or more indie films, this is a good place to start. It's also a haunting paean to American pop-culture which will resonate in the mind long after the end credits have rolled.
Late Night Grande Hotel: Cinque Lee and Screamin' Jay Hawkins in Mystery Train
Director: Jim Jarmusch
Screenplay: Jim Jarmusch
Starring: Youki Kudoh, Masatoshi Nagase, Screamin' Jay Hawkins, Cinque Lee, Nicoletta Braschi, Elizabeth Bracco, Rick Aviles, Joe Strummer, Steve Buscemi,
Running Time: 113 minutes
Genre: comedy-drama
This film collects three separate but connected stories, all set during the same 24 hour period in Memphis, Tennessee, linked by a run-down hotel, a single gunshot and the legacy of Elvis Presley. A teenage Japanese couple visit Memphis on a rock 'n' roll pilgrimage, Mitsuko (Kudoh) is crazy about the King, while Jun (Nagase) is more of a Carl Perkins man. A young Italian widow, Luisa (Braschi), is stranded in Memphis during an unexpected 24 hour layover while escorting her husband's body back to Italy. A hapless barber, Charlie (Buscemi), is unwittingly involved in a liquor store robbery by his drunk, English brother-in-law (Strummer).
This is a slow, melancholy movie. It's funny but it is comedy of the most deadpan sort. Jarmusch once commented that he makes films out of the parts that other directors cut out, and this really feels like that. It's a film full of long pauses, meandering conversations and long sequences of characters wandering around. It is strangely affecting and haunting though. The stories with the Japanese couple and the Italian widow capture the feeling of being in a strange city, far from home, and the story about the barber features one of the best scenes of drunkenness on film. The story with the barber is probably the most mainstream segment, and is Tarantinoesque before Quentin Tarantino, including a conversation about Lost in Space that could almost have been written by Tarantino. The stories are connected by scenes with Screamin' Jay Hawkins as the night manager of the hotel and Cinque Lee as a porter, who provide some of the film's funniest moments, with Hawkins being able to bring the laughs and express so much with just one look. There are some great performances from Kudoh, Nagase and Braschi. Buscemi's put-upon barber and Strummer's aggressive Brit are hilarious together. Music is ever present in the film, Elvis Presley is referenced in all three of the stories, the Japanese couple are fascinated by American rock 'n' roll, and there are several musicians in the cast: Soul singer Screamin' Jay Hawkins, Joe Strummer who was frontman for British rock group The Clash, and Tom Waits lends his gravely tones as the voice of a late-night radio DJ.
Jarmusch's brand of cool, deadpan whimsy won't appeal to everyone. It is slow and not much happens for a lot of the film, but it is one of Jarmusch's most accessible films and the epitome of American indie cool. If you think you might have a taste for underground or more indie films, this is a good place to start. It's also a haunting paean to American pop-culture which will resonate in the mind long after the end credits have rolled.
Late Night Grande Hotel: Cinque Lee and Screamin' Jay Hawkins in Mystery Train
Labels:
Cinque Lee,
comedy drama,
Elizabeth Bracco,
Jim Jarmusch,
Joe Strummer,
Masatoshi Nagase,
Mystery Train,
Nicoletta Braschi,
Rick Aviles,
Screamin' Jay Hawkins,
Steve Buscemi,
Youki Kudoh
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