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A Blog About Watching Movies (AKA a Blog in Search of a Better Title)

Psycho (1998)

Mac Boyle September 13, 2024

Director: Gus Van Sant

Cast: Vince Vaughn, Julianne Moore, Viggo Mortensen, Anne Heche

Have I Seen it Before: Yes. Why I watched it again—when there may not be a film in all of history that more desperately begs you to watch another film—I’ll never know.

Did I Like It: The film is ultimately a cheat, but a fascinating cheat. What would possess someone to make a film this way? I don’t think I’ve yet to be able to wrap my head around that one. It works, but that’s because it was made right the first time. Comparisons are natural, and this film was destined to suffer in light of its predecessor, but Van Sant honestly thought Vaughn was the right guy to put in that role? He can’t help but display the personae he was honing and continued to hone in light comedies. I mean, Keaton might have been a little too old for the role, but if you’re going to do something crazy, reach for something that works. I’m also more than a little annoyed with Elfman’s similarly carbon copying of Bernard Hermann’s score. He suddenly got the idea that he can just plug in old themes and not do any of the off-the-wall work he did earlier in his career, a quarter of a century later he’s phoning in the orchestrations for Beetlejuice Beetlejuice (2024).

I’d mention something—really, anything—else, but again, the film is ultimately a cheat. I always promised myself that I would write a minimum 300 words (I’m real close) for each of these reviews, but if Van Sant can cheat, so can I. So, without further adieu, here’s my review of the original film. Feels appropriate.

Title: Psycho (1960)

Director: Alfred Hitchcock

Cast: Anthony Perkins, Janet Leigh, Vera Miles, John Gavin

Have I Seen it Before: Please... Is it weird that I view this movie as cinematic comfort food? I’m reasonably sure Hitchcock didn’t mean it to be so.

Did I Like It: I don’t think there’s enough written—<except by me>—about how Psycho is, at it’s core, the greatest B movie ever produced. The budget is nearly non-existent, especially in relation to Hitchcock’s immediately preceding production, North By Northwest (1959). The biggest star in the movie (and one hopes this isn’t exactly a spoiler) is killed before the plot truly gets running.

And that plot is, objectively, a muddled mess. In any other circumstances, a story that begins about a woman (Leigh) making a run for it with thousands of dollars of her employers money, only to veer wildly into the events after her sudden murder.

In another time, and another place, and most importantly, with another filmmaker at the helm, the film would have become a salacious, forgettable thriller that would have dropped off the face of the earth the instant drive-in movie theaters became all but extinct.

But we’re talking about Hitchcock here. In his hands, it single-handedly launches the slasher genre, inspiring an army of lesser sequels, homages, and echoes. The plot that shouldn’t work is a pure mis-direction fueled magic trick. We trust Hitch to tell us a story of the woman on the run, and after everything changes, we can never feel settled for the rest of the picture, or for any movie ever again.

Or, maybe, it has nothing to do with trust. Hitchcock works on a level few, if any of us, can fathom. This film is arguably his most famous, and he makes the whole thing seem effortless. It is a marvel to watch each and every time I have spun it in my Blu Ray player.

Tags psycho (1998), gus van sant, vince vaughn, julianne moore, viggo mortensen, anne heche
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Finding Forrester (2000)

Mac Boyle June 27, 2021

Director: Gus Van Sant

Cast: Sean Connery, F. Murray Abraham, Rob Brown, Anna Paquin

Have I Seen it Before: Oh, sure. Hell, I once gave a presentation to a writer’s group where I showed the famous “You’re the Man Now, Dog” scene as a segue to the virtues of using a typewriter.

Which really should have been the takeaway from that scene, not the decade-plus of memes we got as a result.

Did I Like It: It would be easy to dismiss the film for the parts that some might call derivative. The film is built on a foundation of the white savior complex, which one can only hope will age even more poorly as the years progress. It has enough of Van Sant’s early triumph with Good Will Hunting (1997) looming over it to ever get to be its own movie. And there’s more than a little bit of Scent of a Woman (1992) to make the whole thing feel familiar to the point of being a pat.

The thing is, I can never truly dismiss the film any time I see it. For one thing, it gets the feeling of writing correct*. Punching the keys; sometimes its the rhythm. Reading for dinner and dessert. Write with your heart; re-write with your head. 

And then there’s the case of Sean Connery. His storied film career went out with whimper in films like The Avengers (1998) and The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen (2003), and we forget that he had one great film performance left to him. His Forrester takes the broad brush strokes of J.D. Salinger and made him a triumph of both sadness and triumph. There are plenty of leading men built on an image of machismo who couldn’t reach for that level of vulnerability, much less in his second-to-last role.


*For other entries in this hallowed pantheon, see Shakespeare in Love (1998), Wonder Boys (2000) (of which I am shocked to learn that, as of this writing, I have not written a review), and Adaptation (2002)… I’m sure I’m missing others which might have been made prior to the Clinton administration, but they are escaping me… Let’s just go with the introduction scene of Bride of Frankenstein (1935) and call it good.

Tags finding forrester (2000), gus van sant, sean connery, f murray abraham, rob brown, anna paquin
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Party Now, Apocalypse Later Industries

Where creativity went when it said it was going out for cigarettes.

Where creativity went when it said it was going out for cigarettes.