luni, 8 septembrie 2025

Inside Man (2006) English

 Inside Man – Inside Spike Lee’s Cap

Alin Ludu Dumbravă, Șapte Seri / April 2006

"Small country, a few tables." (Gheorghe Dinică)

And no hats. I think almost every passionate cinemagoer here (a small, somewhat dysfunctional minority, like the great bustard in Bărăgan) knows Spike Lee — “that Black guy with glasses and a cap” — from that Orange Wednesday commercial, where he pitches a baseball movie. “Their colors were white and blue — can’t it be orange?” they give him a corporate cap: “Hey Spike, you forgot your hat!” Classic Orange Wednesday commercials (no, not the ones with hobbits with weird voices; no, Orange doesn’t pay me).



What was I writing? Ah, yes… Spike Lee’s cap. Hobbits. Baseball. Because here, this breed of cinema wanderer — let’s call him the inside man, like in Spike’s film, which he made after they refused to fund that other baseball movie — expects not to have the credits cut, popcorn dropped on his head, or get called by fools during the screening. He wants the film projected correctly, with care (I can already hear the muted curses of projectionists who just want peace, since “the equipment dates back to Ceaușescu”), yet he’s actually an outside man, getting roughed up regularly, like in the joke about the bear and the rabbit: “Why don’t you have a hat, man?” — Bam!

But let’s get back to Spike’s film — the second to hit our screens after 25th Hour; the guy’s been making films since the ’80s! Inside Man is his first truly commercial movie, with the biggest budget, A-list stars, studio financing and marketing. A film about (fake) heists, hostages, New Yorkers, and even… Albanians (a Romanian actress — Florina Petcu, see her photo on IMDb — plays an Albanian), without baseball or caps (Denzel wears a fedora).

With stars like Clive Owen, Denzel Washington (his fourth Spike Lee film), Jodie Foster, Christopher Plummer, and Willem Dafoe. A strong opening credit sequence, flawless cinematography, sharp editing, and a Terence Blanchard score. Like Brian De Palma’s Mission: Impossible, a commercial concession, Inside Man is intelligent, subversive, and acerbic. Add Spike Lee’s personal touch, racial undertones, and his unmistakable New Yorker flavor in the tense post-9/11 climate — humor and energy included.

More interesting for the cinemagoer than the movie about the guy in white-and-blue baseball gear. “Hey Spike, you forgot your hat!” Paraphrasing: “No hat? Take a Koprol!”

Directed by: Spike Lee
Starring: Denzel Washington, Clive Owen, Jodie Foster, Willem Dafoe

RIP Rick Davies

Rick Davies, the keyboardist of Supertramp (on Wurlitzer), and founding member in 1969, died on Sept. 6th 2025 at 81 :( 

He stayed with the band after Roger Hodgson's departure, in 1983. 

Supertramp was one of my favorite bands in the 80's, and in the 90's too, following my exposure to the vinyl of Breakfast in America (1979), which I kept and played to exhaustion. Then saw the vhs of Paris Live and later on I taped and then bought all their CD's, classic perios era. Saw only Roger Hodgson live in 2019 in Bucharest...

                                                              "Ain't Nobody But Me"

Rolling Stone obit here 

marți, 2 septembrie 2025

Caught Stealing (2025)

Darren Aronofsky is an arthouse favorite from Pi to The Whale, passing through The Fountain, Black Swan and The Wrestler), and this Caught Stealing might be his most commercial film yet. But that's not a bad thing. At all. 


Taking cues from the Coens and Guy Ritchie, he revisits New York of 1998 in a dark irreverent comedy thriller complete with an English Punk mohawk, a cat, Russian mobsters and two Rabbi killers. 

Written by Charlie Huston, based on his book from 2004.  It's actually the 1st book in a series of three, about the character Hank Thompson. If Caught... (great Romanian Title, Prins cu mata-n sac....NOT) is a hit. Hopefully it will and Butler will carry on. 

A major influence, as also checked is After Hours (Scorsese, 1985), see the video in the comments.

Very cool cast, including Griffin Dunne from After Hours, who could be actually the same character, Paul, Village bar owner, mentioning Lou and Andy ;), Austin Butler (his third important lead, after Elvis and The Bikeriders), Zoë Kravitz (Blink Twice), Regina King, rappers Bad Bunny & Action Bronson and brit Matt Smith. Plus the fantastic duo of Liev Schrieber and Vincent D'Onofrio. Another fantastic duo, the Russians -Nikita Kukushkin (Microbe)  and Yuri Kolokolnikov (Alexei). Also featuring Carol Kane. But the absolute highlight is Bud the Cat, played by Tonic. 

Shot by Aronofsky's regular, Matthew Libatique in 1.85: 1. Some impressive camera moves and angles, great location value, NY truly lives in every shot. Lots of graffiti dressing. Libatique shot this back to back in NY locations with Spike Lee's Highest 2 Lowest.

 

Songs by post-punk band Idles, score by Rob Simonsen. Including a cover of Police and Thieves, made famous by The Clash in 1976. Some Bowie references, a lot of pop culture around, all soundtrack songs here.



RIP Graham Greene

 Graham Greene, Dances with Wolves now on the other side...

Thunderheart, Wind River