Showing posts with label seymour cassel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label seymour cassel. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 29, 2025

2025 Blind Spot Series: Love Streams

 

Based on a play by Ted Allen, Love Streams is the story of two middle-aged siblings who reunite following their own respective relationships with other people falling apart. Directed by John Cassavetes and screenplay by Cassavetes and Allen, the film is an exploration of two adult siblings whose respective family lives have fallen into chaos as they turn to each other for emotional support. Starring John Cassavetes, Gena Rowlands, Seymour Cassel, and Diahnne Abbott. Love Streams is a riveting and heart wrenching film by John Cassavetes.

The film is the story of two adult siblings who have not seen each other in years as both endure turmoil in their individual lives where they reunite to understand what is wrong with them. It is a film that explores two people who both deal with loneliness with one breaking away from her family while her brother is losing himself to a lifestyle that has become fleeting. The film’s screenplay by John Cassavetes and Ted Allen, which is based on the play by the latter, is a study of sibling relationships as well as two people who are in and out of love. Robert Harmon (John Cassavetes) is a novelist who spends his time going to nightclubs as he is doing research for a novel as he spends his time at home with a bevy of women while is pursuing a singer in Susan (Diahnne Abbott). His sister Sarah Lawson (Gena Rowlands) has just divorced her husband Jack (Seymour Cassel) as they are in a custody battle over their teenage daughter Debbie (Risa Martha Blewitt) who is choosing her father instead of Sarah due to Sarah’s own emotional issues.

The first act is about the individual lives of Robert and Sarah where the two become lost in their own lives with the former continuing a troubling lifestyle while he wants to go out with Susan but does not want any emotional attachments. For Sarah, Debbie’s decision to be with her father becomes emotionally and mentally crushing where she would take bad advice from her psychiatrist to distract herself from her issues only to put herself in a worst situation. The second act begins with not just Sarah’s own reunion with Robert but also an unexpected visitor to his 8-year-old son Albie (Jakob Shaw), whose mother is going away for the weekend, forcing Robert to spend a day with him. Despite Robert’s faults as a man who cares more about himself than Albie, he is aware of his faults as he knows he is not the parental figure Albie needs where he would have an unfortunate encounter with Albie’s stepfather. The third act relates to Sarah trying to do something for Robert as he is alone in his house while she is also trying to deal with her own situation where elements of surrealism would occur.

Cassavetes’ direction is stylish for some of the moments that involve surrealism as it plays into Sarah’s own thoughts about her family. Yet, Cassavetes maintains a sense of normalcy in terms of the compositions he creates with much of the film set in Robert’s home which is the home that Cassavetes and Gena Rowlands own in Los Angeles, California. Shot on locations in Southern California including Los Angeles and parts of Las Vegas, Cassavetes creates a film that is lively yet also full of uncertainty in his compositions with the wide and medium shots to get a look into the locations including Robert’s home where the hallways has this sense of claustrophobia to play into Robert’s own isolation. There are also close-ups that play into the loneliness that both Robert and Sarah deal with, as Cassavetes also aims for this sense of drama that does feel theatrical only because it is set at Robert’s house. Cassavetes’ usage of tracking shots is also key as its help play into the movement of one location at the house to another instead of aiming for something loose with hand-held cameras.

Cassavetes’ approach to surrealism plays more into Sarah’s own thoughts as her own family life begins to crumble. Notably a violent scene in the first act when she is in Paris thinking about her husband and daughter as well as a few other moments in the film’s third act. It all plays with Sarah trying to make sense of her faults where she decides to do something for Robert since he no longer has his many girlfriends at the house. What she does is a shock to Robert, but he cares about Sarah that he is willing to go along with it despite his own faults. Even when Sarah goes into a state of delirium as she becomes overwhelmed with her own drama as Robert begins to do anything to get her out of her state. Cassavetes would create a sense of urgency in the drama while also keeping things uncertain as it relates to the fates of both Robert and Sarah as they are both at a crossroad over their own individual lives as they need each other more than ever. Overall, Cassavetes crafts a somber yet rapturous film about two siblings who reunite to deal with their own loneliness.

Cinematographer Al Ruban does brilliant work with the film’s cinematography with the way some of the nighttime interior/exterior scenes are presented along with the sunny look of the daytime exterior scenes. Editor George C. Villasenor does excellent work with the editing with its stylish approach to jump-cuts while knowing when not to cut during some of the long tracking shots. Production designer Phedon Papamichael and art director Maria Caso do amazing work with the look of Robert’s home with its array of picture galleries as well as the hotel room he and his son stayed in Vegas as well as the home of Susan. Costume designers Jennifer Smith-Ashley and Lydia Manderson do fantastic work with the costumes in the posh dresses that Sarah wears to the suits and tuxedos that Robert wear as it plays into their lifestyles.

Makeup artist Michael Stein and hairstylist Deann Power do terrific work with the look of the characters in some of the performance parts such as the nightclub and a weird ballerina performance in the film’s third act. The special effects by John Eggett does nice work with some of the film’s minimal effects that play into a few surreal moments that Sarah dreams about. Sound mixers Bo Harwood, Richard Lightstone, and Mike Denecke do superb work with the sound in capturing everything that is happening on location including music that is played in a room or at a club. The film’s music by Bo Harwood is wonderful for its music score that only appears sparingly in its mixture of jazz and electronic music that plays into the drama and some of the surreal elements while its music soundtracks consists largely of jazz, folk, and cabaret music including the stuff played at the nightclub that Robert goes to.

The film’s marvelous ensemble cast include some notable small roles from Raphael de Niro as Susan’s son, Xan Cassavetes and Dominique Davalos as backup singers for Susan, John Roselius as a man that Sarah meets in a bowling alley, David Rowlands as Sarah’s psychiatrist who gives her bad advice, Robert Fieldsteel as a doctor that appears late in the film, Tom Badal as Jack’s lawyer, Al Ruban as Sarah’s lawyer, Joan Foley as the judge in the custody case, Christopher O’Neill as a drag performer named Phyllis that Robert meets at a nightclub, Julie Allan as Robert’s secretary Charlene, Magaret Abbott as Susan’s mother Margarita whom Robert would party with, Eddy Donno as Albie’s stepfather who hates Robert, Michele Conway as Albie’s mother, and in the role of Robert’s girlfriends at his house include Leslie Hope, Renee Leflore, Joan Dykman, Bronwyn Bober, Victoria Morgan, Barbara Difrenza, and Cindy Davidson.

Jakob Shaw and Risa Martha Blewitt are fantastic in their respective roles as Robert’s son Albie and Sarah’s daughter Debbie as two kids who are in complicated situations with the former trying to get to know his dad is despite Robert’s troubling lifestyle while the latter is someone who feels smothered by her mother and prefers to be with her father. Diahnne Abbott is excellent as the cabaret singer Susan as a woman that Robert pursues as she is hesitant about spending time with him while being aware of his charms and good qualities though she is troubled by his bad qualities. Seymour Cassel is superb as Sarah’s ex-husband Jack Lawson who is weary of his ex-wife’s mood swings and behavior where he is trying to get custody of their daughter even though he admits to knowing much in how to deal with a teenage girl.

Finally, there’s John Cassavetes and Gena Rowlands in tremendous performances in their respective roles as the siblings Robert and Sarah. Cassavetes brings a charm and liveliness to the character of Robert who likes to party and be around women while also works as a writer where he goes to nightclubs to do research as is reluctant to get serious in being in a relationship despite his feelings for Susan. Rowlands is the more dramatic of the two as a woman that is in anguish over her custody battle and often loving too much where she is coping with not just uncertainty in her life but also the fear of being truly alone. Cassavetes and Rowlands together are electrifying to watch as two broken people who are troubled by the past as well as issues in their own life as they play into this sibling dynamic of two people who really need each other.

Love Streams is a spectacular film by John Cassavetes that is highlighted by the performances of himself and wife Gena Rowlands. Along with its supporting cast, colorful visuals, study of loss and loneliness, and a playful yet eerie music soundtrack. The film is an intense dramatic film that is about two siblings who are both falling apart in their own lives as they also try to help each other after a long period of estrangement. In the end, Love Streams is a sensational film by John Cassavetes.

John Cassavetes Films: (Shadows (1959 film)) – (Too Late Blues) – (A Child is Waiting) – (Faces) – Husbands - (Minnie and Moskowitz) – A Woman Under the Influence - (The Killing of a Chinese Bookie) – (Opening Night) – Gloria (1980 film) - (Big Trouble (1986 film))

© thevoid99 2025

Friday, December 23, 2016

Convoy (1978 film)




Directed by Sam Peckinpah and written by Bill L. Norton, Convoy is the story of a group of truckers who band together to do a convoy and deal with a corrupt sheriff. Based on C.W. McCall song of the same name and the CB radio-fad of the 1970s, the film is an action-adventure film that revolves around the craze into a road-like adventure. Starring Kris Kristofferson, Ali MacGraw, Burt Young, Madge Sinclair, Franklyn Ajaye, Burt Young, Seymour Cassel, and Ernest Borgnine. Convoy is a silly and uninteresting film from Sam Peckinpah.

The film follows around a trucker whose encounters with a corrupt sheriff forces him to create a convoy from Arizona to Texas in order to avoid persecution during a brawl at a restaurant. It’s a film with a simple story but it never makes sense into what is going on into why these truckers are doing a convoy across the American Southwest while trying to avoid the authorities. The film’s screenplay has a lot that is happening but it often feels very derivative of the car chase films of the 1970s. Most notably Smokey and the Bandit but with lots of trucks and a more devious antagonist as it never really provides any idea of what these truckers are doing a convoy for as its protagonist Rubber Duck (Kris Kristofferson) becomes some unlikely folk hero. Though Rubber Duck is definitely the most interesting character of the film along with a few fellow truckers, they’re not given much to do or be fleshed out more while Duck’s traveling companion in a photographer Melissa (Ali MacGraw) is just some love interest.

While there are elements in Sam Peckinpah’s direction that bear some of his visual trademark in terms of his elaborate action set pieces and slow-motion approach to action. Yet, it feels quite derivative as it goes overboard and doesn’t really do much to help tell the story while it is clear that there was some tampering into what Peckinpah was trying to do. While there are some wide shots of the locations with some second unit direction provided by James Coburn. The direction is often focused on close-ups and medium shots to capture what goes on inside a truck as well as the world of the truck stops and camps where they go into. Yet, they don’t really do much visually where Peckinpah wanted to balance not just some of the action but also the humor as the latter feels forced. When it reaches it climax in this showdown between Rubber Duck and the sheriff known as Cottonmouth (Ernest Borgnine), it does feel quite derivative as it is overly stylized and it is followed by something that is quite lame as it pertains to its ending which is definitely something Peckinpah doesn’t do. Overall, Peckinpah creates a messy and ridiculous film about a trucker leading a convoy against a vile sheriff.

Cinematographer Harry Stradling Jr. does nice work with the film’s cinematography as it play into the gorgeous sunny locations of the American Southwest in the day along with some lighting for the scenes set at night. Editors Garth Craven and John Wright do OK work with the editing where it does showcase what is happening yet its approach in the slow-motion cuts and some of the fast-cutting is just downright terrible. Production designer Fernando Carrere, with set decorator Frank Lombardo and art director J. Dennis Washington, does nice work with some of the interior of the trucks and truck stops as well as the truckers‘ camp in the film‘s second half. Sound mixer William Randall does some fine work with the sound as it play into the way the horns sound as well as the truck engines and other moments involving the action. The film’s music by Chip Davis is pretty good for its mixture of orchestral music with bits of country to play into the world of the American Southwest while music supervisor Bill Fries creates a soundtrack filled with music from Glen Campbell, Merle Haggard, Crystal Gayle, Kenny Rogers, Doc Watson, Anne Murray, and a new version of the titular song by C.W. McCall.

The casting by Lynn Stalmaster is superb for the ensemble that is created despite its lackluster script as it feature some notable small roles from Jorge Russek as a brutal sheriff from Texas, Tommy Bush as a sheriff trying to help Cottonmouth, Donnie Fritts as the Reverend Sloane who rides a bus and joins the convoy with his band of hippie churchgoers, Cassie Yates as Rubber Duck’s waitress girlfriend Violet, and Seymour Cassel as New Mexico governor Jerry Haskins who wants to use Rubber Duck for his own political campaign for the senate. Franklyn Ajaye and Madge Sinclair are good in their respective roles as the African-American truckers Spider Mike and Widow Woman with the former wanting to get home to his wife for the birth of his child and the latter being this quirky, Rastafarian-type of gal.

Burt Young is terrific as Bobby aka Pig Pen/Love Machine as the comic relief who is also a realist as he is this trucker that knows what is going on and can smell bullshit from miles away. Ernest Borgnine is terrible as the sheriff Cottonmouth as a sheriff that is quite dark yet is often seen as a comic foil as Borgnine is unfortunately put into some very humiliating moments. Ali MacGraw is uninspired as Melissa as a photographer with a bad haircut who is just there as a reluctant love interest that is trying to understand what Rubber Duck is doing as it’s just a badly written character. Finally, there’s Kris Kristofferson in a wonderful performance as Rubber Duck as a truck driver who has had enough of Cottonmouth’s abusive attitude as he decides to go on the run unaware that he’s created a convoy even though it’s a role that isn’t well-written either.

Convoy is a pretty bad film from Sam Peckinpah that bear little of his oeuvre as well as the fact that it’s just a film based on a fucking novelty song. It’s a film for anyone interested in the CB craze of the 70s might want to take an interest in but this is definitely an inessential film from Peckinpah as it shows a director not in total control. In the end, Convoy is just a terrible film from Sam Peckinpah.

Sam Peckinpah Films: The Deadly Companions - Ride the High Country - Major Dundee - Noon Wine - The Wild Bunch - The Ballad of Cable Hogue - Straw Dogs - Junior Bonner - The Getaway - Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid - Bring Me the Head of Alfredo Garcia - The Killer Elite - Cross of Iron - The Osterman Weekend - The Auteurs #62: Sam Peckinpah

© thevoid99 2016

Wednesday, February 01, 2012

Rushmore


Originally Written and Posted at Epinions.com on 5/11/05 w/ Additional Edits & Revisions.


Directed by Wes Anderson and written by Anderson and Owen Wilson, Rushmore is the story of a 15-year old prep school student who befriends a disillusioned millionaire as they both fall for a widowed first grade teacher. The two embark on a feud that becomes troubling as the two deal with their own personal issues. The film is an exploration on youth and the relationships they have with adults as the film does more than just be a high school story. Starring Jason Schwartzman, Bill Murray, Olivia Williams, Seymour Cassel, Stephen McCole, Luke Wilson, Mason Gamble, Sara Tanaka, and Brian Cox. Rushmore is a lively yet exhilarating film from Wes Anderson.

Max Fischer (Jason Schwartman) is a 15-year old student at the prestigious Rushmore Academy as he enjoys being a student where he forms several clubs and participate in various extracurricular activities that included leading school plays. Despite being ambitious in those activities, he is school's worst student as Max is also a liar where he claims that his barber father Bert (Seymour Cassel) is a neurosurgeon. When the school's headmaster Dr. Guggenheim (Brian Cox) puts Max on academic probation, Max tries to fulfill his duties with friend Dirk Calloway (Mason Gamble) where they meet business tycoon Herman Blume (Bill Murray) at a seminar at the school. Blume's twin sons Donny and Ronny (Keith & Ronnie McCawley) attend Rushmore as Herman finds a friend in Max while Herman is dealing with his own morose life that includes his bratty sons and neglectful wife (Kim Terry). When Max checks out a Jacques Costeau book, he learns that the school's new first grade schoolteacher Rosemary Cross (Olivia Williams) has been checking the book out as Max falls for her.

Wanting to impress her, Max gets Latin back into the school's curriculum while wanting to make plans for an aquarium due to her love for fishes and various sea creatures. Max turns to Blume for help as Blume becomes infatuated with Rosemary during a dinner to celebrate Max's play version of Serpico which becomes a disaster due to the presence of Rosemary's friend Dr. Peter Flynn (Luke Wilson) as Max thinks it's her boyfriend. Due to Max's attempt to create an aquarium near the school, Max is kicked out of Rushmore as he's forced to go to public school where he meets the ambitious Margaret Yang (Sara Tanaka). After an encounter with Scottish classmate Magnus Buchan (Stephen McCole) at Rushmore about Dirk's mother (Connie Nielsen), Max makes a lie that would eventually damage his friendship with Dirk while Blume starts a secret relationship with Rosemary.

After learning about the relationship, Max exposes the news to Mrs. Blume as a war between him and Blume explodes with Rosemary resigning from Rushmore as Max also dropping out of school due to the war. Working with his dad at the barber shop, Dirk visits with some news about Dr. Guggenheim's stroke where Max also meets Blume at the hospital. Realizing that Rosemary isn't over the death of her husband, Max decides to make amends as he also gets Margaret's help to fix things as he would stage his most ambitious play to date.

While retaining the optimistic innocence that was in Bottle Rocket, Rushmore is more rooted in melancholia and light-hearted humor. Notably of its three central characters, since they all have a sense of sadness around them. Max, is a kid trying to find himself only to be hit with sadness when he doesn’t get what he wants only turning to the grave of his mother. Miss Cross is a sullen woman who remains troubled by her husband's death and how Max reminds her of him. Then there's Herman Blume who is a man that has everything but is so morose by his lifestyle and everything he has, there is nowhere for him to turn to.

The genius of Rushmore really goes to the team of Wes Anderson and Owen Wilson for finding light-hearted sentimentality in the most offbeat places. They create characters that are flawed in their own ways, even in the most sympathetic of places while smaller characters appear for humor or dramatic purposes. It's a very intelligent coming-of-age story with characters developing into something more. With Anderson bringing in great scenery, his direction is very different from his previous film since he uses every eccentric idea for something that is light-hearted and humorous. Even in the scenes with the play, there is a lot of humor and small theatricality to it as it's Anderson's best work as a director so far.

Helping in the directing is longtime cinematographer Robert Yeomen who brings in a colorful look to the films in its interior sequences along with some wonderful, dreamy textures in many of the film's exterior scenes around the Rushmore academy. Production designer David Wasco along with wife and set decorator Sandy Reynolds-Wasco and art director Andrew Laws brings in a lovely, colorful feel to school of Rushmore with its dark yet natural colors while the stage production of Max's plays are a lovely spectacle. With Karen Patch bringing in some nice costume work, notably on Max's plays and the suit that he wears, the film has a nice look. With longtime editor David Moritz bringing in a leisurely-paced editing style that gives the film a smooth, offbeat film, the movie does not lose rhythm.

Another great element in all of Wes Anderson's films is the music with a great, off-kilter score from Devo's Mark Mothersbaugh bringing in a nice, jazzy tone to the film as well as harpsichord like arpeggios to play off the film’s innocence. Then there's film the film diverse soundtrack filled mostly with British rock music with stuff by the Who, the Rolling Stones, John Lennon, the Faces, Creation, the Kinks, Chad & Jeremy, Donovan, and a couple of cuts from Cat Stevens plus jazz musician Django Reinhardt and French singer Yves Montand. All of those tracks are used very well to convey teen angst as well as the film's lighthearted sentimentality.

Then there's the film's amazing cast with some great and small performances from not just Anderson's friends like Stephen Dignan, Dipak Pallana, Eric Chase Anderson, Brian Tenenbaum, Andrew Wilson, and the always hilarious Kumar Pallana with his one-liners. Also memorable were the McCawley teens as Herman Blume's evil twins and Kim Terry as Blume's wife. While Anderson regulars Luke and Owen Wilson (the latter appears as a picture) only had small roles, Luke is generally funny as Dr. Peter Flynn while Connie Nielsen makes a memorable appearance as Dirk's sexy mom. Sara Tanaka is wonderfully exquisite as the sweet Margaret Yang as well as Mason Gamble who gives an excellent performance as Max's best friend. Stephen McCole is amazing as the curse-wielding Scots Magnus with his hilarious one-liners as well. Seymour Cassel is excellent in the role as Max's simplistic father while Brian Cox rules as Dr. Guggenheim with his tough but sympathetic performance as Max's headmaster.

Olivia Williams brings a calm, complex performance as Rosemary Cross with her maternal-like stature and melancholic tone as a woman who is trying to move on but only find her suitors to be like children. Williams really brings the sweetness and sadness of the film that is enriching. Jason Schwartzman is the film's real breakthrough as the precocious and ambitious Max Fischer. While Max may not have some likeable qualities, Schwartzman makes sure that Max is a kid that an audience can relate to in terms of dreams along with a sadness while trying to understand the world. Schwartzman is amazing and is really the soul of the film.

The film's best performance easily goes to Bill Murray. While it's not in the realm of comedy classics like Caddyshack, Stripes, Ghostbusters, Scrooged, and What About Bob?, Murray shows more of the same range as an actor that he did years ago in Groundhog Day. Playing the morose and self-loathing Herman Blume showed what brilliance Murray can do in making a very pathetic character into someone we care about despite his flaws. It's no surprise in why Anderson wanted to work with Murray all the time and it's his performance in this film is really a precursor to his greatest performance in Sofia Coppola's 2003 film Lost in Translation. It's Murray's approach to subtlety and offbeat comedic timing that makes the Herman Blume character one of the most memorable as he brings in great chemistry with Schwartzman and Williams in their respective scenes.

If there’s one film from Wes Anderson to start with, Rushmore would be the film to see first. The film is truly one of Anderson's most touching and entertaining films of his career as it features a truly outstanding ensemble led by Bill Murray, Jason Schwartzman, and Olivia Williams. The film is also among one of the best high school movies that strays away from its typical class formula as well as having an energy that is truly intoxicating to watch. In the end, Rushmore is a brilliant film from Wes Anderson and company.


© thevoid99 2012