Rating: Summary: It is, believe it or not ya radges, Allen's bestest. Review: The Woodmeister himself has declared Stardust Memories one of his best movies, and I have to agree with the funny old ferret. Allen's early career consisted of laugh-a-minute slapstick comedies, which were wonderful (especially Love & Death in 1975); from Manhattan(1979) onwards he toned everything down a bit, replacing the slapstick with human drama, although always leaving in the priceless oneliners. I feel that Stardust Memories(1980) is his best film because it manages to meld the comedy and drama together better than all of his other attempts. (I'm not a big fan of Manhattan, I think it's dull; Crimes & Misdemeanors is perhaps his second-best move-tastic motion picture.) There's some out-and-out hilarious comedy, which self-knowingly refers back to Allen's early comedic style, and the drama is complex and moving. There are moments of bad taste, and the film sometimes seems geared to patronise Allen's fans, but these are brave moves, and make it all the more memorable. Beautifully shot, wonderfully acted, brilliantly written, astoundingly funny, powerfully touching, insanely insane, comically surreal, slyly self-referential, overtly recommendable to friends and family, oven-fresh and microwave-compatible. PS Keep your eyes peeled for a blink-and-you'll-miss-it from a young Sharon Stone at the beginning. ...
Rating: Summary: Tell Funnier Jokes Review: There are 2 kinds of Woody fans- those who like his earlier silly stuff (ala Mel Brooks) and those who appreciate his deeper side. Those who like the 1st kind of films will not like this. This is by far his best film- along with the brilliant "Another Woman" where he shows us a poetic side of himself, trying to find "meaning" in this life, only then to be visited by aliens who tell him to "tell funner jokes" if he wants to do the world a real favor. People who dis this film don't see how profound a statement that is- basically do what you're good at. Just think about how many singers/song writers set out to "do good" rather than just focus on what they do best. Just think if Picasso had chosen to be a missionary rather than what he's known for- we would have all suffered on account of it. Highly symbolic and deeply probing, this film is not without humor as well. I don't understand how people can rip on this film yet think something like "Saving Private Ryan" is four star material. Stardust Memories has multiple meanings and dementions, unlike the one-dimentional Hollywood attempt to be deep, by stating the obvious, that yes, WAR IS BAD.
Rating: Summary: For a great double feature, see 8 1/2 and Stardust Memories Review: This is one of my favorite Woody Allen films--basically his version of Fellini's 8 1/2. Both Sammy Bates and Guido (of 8 1/2) are struggling thru a midlife crisis. Both want to do something different with their films--and both feel that they've stagnated professionally. Both men are also seeking spiritual and emotional growth. Treat yourself to a wonderful double feature--see both films!
Rating: Summary: John Coltrane and ice cream Review: This is one of my most favorite movies. This film is meaningful, funny, and beautiful. The dialogue, directing, and great acting make this movie feel very authentic and realistic.
Apparently this movie did not recieve acclaim from people who watch things like Torque, Fast and The Furious, and How Stella Got Her Groove Back. Don't listen to those critics. If you enjoy films that rely on great ideas, writing, and performances, then you should love this movie.
I love Woody Allen films, especially his newer serious ones. If you enjoyed Crimes and Misdemeanors, I highly recommend this movie.
Aaron
Rating: Summary: Every bit as good as Annie Hall, yet entirely different Review: To me Stardust Memories is Allen's most beautiful and complex film. It is difficult to express in words the aspects of the film that resonated with me. If one does not pay close attention, and views the film merely with one's eyes and brain, one can miss the beauty of the film. The film is basically about a successful film director named Sandy (Allen) who is sort of forced into going to a film festival of his films. He is very reluctant to do so because he views festivals as a waste of time, and partially because the festival mainly showcases his earlier, funnier films which he is no longer inclined to make. He, instead, wishes to make more deep, serious films. He can no longer make funny films because he is obsessed with the bigger issues of human suffering, death, and the meaning of life. So far, the character Sandy sounds a lot like Allen who initially made only funny films, but moved unto weightier topics, and you are right, it probably is about Allen. However, through the course of the film, we realize that Allen is making much more than a simple diclosure. The film goes a step further by nesting the movie in Sandy's psyche. It is difficult to discern if we are watching a film Sandy made, or watching what really went on during the film festival, or if we are reliving Sandy's memories as a young boy who learned magic tricks to impress friends, or kissed his actress-lover, Dorrie in the rain. Furthermore, the film forces us, the audience, to ask the same troubling questions about life that Sandy confronts. In one scene of the movie, Sandy asks some aliens (who have very conspicuous NY accents) why there is so much human suffering. They answer back by saying he is asking the wrong questions. He asks another question--what is the point of living? The aliens remind Sandy about his love interests in the past and all of the wonderful times they shared. Sandy is dissatisfied with the alien's answers, and the aliens depart before he can find the answer he wants. After the aliens leave, the camera cuts to another scene of three hot air balloons descending. In the background some beautiful, old-timey c.a. WWII music is playing. The viewer realizes that the aliens were a figment of Sandy's yearning for concrete answers about life's troubling questions, and must take the reality of the beautiful image of hot air balloons descending instead. And I think that this is what the film is about. It's about us human beings who do not know and cannot know, really, the answers to the most troubling questions in life, but we learn to live life by hooking on to some of the beautiful realities of life. Whether it is love, beautiful music, or a film about a thoughtful flounderer searching for unfindable answers. Allen does not posit the answer to life, but shows quite honestly that he does not know the answer to life. He only knows that he loves people and music and films. Stardust Memories is Allen's gift to us. It is his offering. It is another thing to help us humans live life in spite of the uncertainty and fear it might engender in us. Through this film, Allen reminds us that we must hold on to the important things in life. We have our memory, we have our love, we have our apprehension of beauty. We may have not have the answers, but at least we have that.
Rating: Summary: Mid-period Woody that's both funny and thoughtful Review: When discussing the two things in this life that man has complete control over, Sandy Bates (Woody Allen) notes that only art and masturbation fall into that category. "Two areas in which I am an absolute expert," he slyly adds. I am so glad Woody included this line. I was just thinking that this film falls neatly into both categories. Oh yes, it is definitely artful. The lush black and white, used so wonderfully in "Manhattan", makes a return engagement here (courtesy of cinematographer Gordon Willis, who again does fine work). Sure, filming in black and white in an era of colour photography can be construed as a tad pretentious, but Woody never lets that get in the way. He strips things down so completely, that you can't help but become engaged with the characters and the issues he's presenting. It's a fine artistic conceit, one that works beautifully. There's a certain surreal quality to the proceedings here, amplified by the jumbled film-with-a-film-within-a-film-within-a-dream-sequence structure. Patience will allow the understanding viewer to make sense of the narrative quite easily. Don't be put off by the art. And sure, the film's themes are highly masturbatory. Can you or I relate to the problems of Woody's celebrity? No, not really. But I feel like I've been given an accurate backstage pass into his world. The army of fans and fanatics that constantly torture pure Sandy with their requests and admiration was portrayed beautifully. There's a definite feeling of claustrophobia that is tangible to the audience, when Woody is barraged by a flurry of autograph pads. The vast supporting cast all do magnificent jobs. It always startles me how Woody can get such natural (or when he needs it, intentionally artificial) performances from his actors. Special mention, of course, should be made for his three leading ladies. Charlotte Rampling as Dorrie, a women who's dynamic only two days of every month and destructive the other twenty-eight, gets the polarities in her character just right. There's one very Godard-like sequence, where jump cuts and dialogue help her portray her particular insanities. She is manic and frustrated, both to perfect degrees. Jessica Harper as Daisy gets to show off many of the same qualities. But there is a touch or morbidity there that shines through in her acting. And Marie-Christine Barrault as Isobel, a woman who's just left her husband to be with Woody, is charming and innocent, with just enough superficiality and brains thrown in so that you understand why Sandy falls for her. Although not as out-and-out hilarious as Woody's "earlier, funnier movies", "Stardust Memories" does have its share of memorable lines (my favourite exchange: "What do you think the Rolls Royce represented?" asks one audience member to another after Sandy's latest opus is screened. "I think it represented his car," comes the befuddled reply). It also shows a willingness to experiment and push the boundaries of Woody's particular brand of filmmaking, so that an alien landing or an assassination attempt doesn't seem that odd (well, yes they do seem odd, but in the context of the world created, not so much). It is most definitely artful, and quite certainly masturbatory. But come to think of it, can't you say that about most Woody Allen movies. I guess this one just wears those qualities on its sleeve a bit more blatantly. Worked for me.
Rating: Summary: One of Woody's best Review: While this film doesn't get the praise and respect of, say, "Annie Hall" or "Manhattan," I think it is a brilliant look into the mind of a film director. How much of Woody Allen is Sandy Bates? Some, I'm sure, but I think it's more interesting to compare Sandy to Woody Allen's "persona"--that is, who the public thinks he is.
The structure of the film is also quite interesting to me. Allen had done a very non-linear story structure, mixed with occasional flights of fantasy, in "Annie Hall," but "Stardust Memories" does that and piles on a movie within a movie within a movie, and manages to both comment on all that, at the same time as he's telling the story of the brilliant, but self-absorbed Sandy Bates.
A great movie, that you probably should see more than once to appreciate.
Rating: Summary: Check your prejudices at the door -- this is great cinema! Review: Why do I choose to waste these few minutes of my life talking about a movie that few people have ever seen and that fewer still want to resurrect? If you mention a "Woody Allen Film" these days, you're bound to elicit one of a few choice conditioned responses - anything from, "Oh, I like his movies, especially the early, funny ones" or "Is he still making films?" The fact is that Woody Allen is one of the great filmmakers to grace the American cinema. Granted, his films today have lost some of their public lustre due to the travails of his personal life and the unbearable political incorrectness of being Woody. Yet fifty years from now, he will be spoken of without hesitation or apology with names such as Kubrick, Ford, Keaton, Spielberg or Malick as one of the greats. Some critics realized this more than twenty years ago and have conveniently forgotten it. But "Stardust Memories", if he never made another film, would insure his place among filmmaking elite. The movie in its time was castigated by critics because it presciently observed them as the high priests of a society which worships culture above art. Culture, of course, changes with the seasons but art is that constant which connects us to each other and the world throughout those changes. Further, it's release coincided with the death of John Lennon. The scene where Sandy Bates is shot by a crazed fan was uncomfortably closer to reality than the comic moment it wished to establish. Great movie, but it's release date just wasn't -- ahem! -- in the stars. "Stardust Memories" is as close to perfect a film as I have ever seen. It borrows the structural approach to its story from Fellini's "8 1/2" but is so true to its own purpose it never seems derivative. It complements the sublime black and white cinematography of Gordon Willis with the patience of a camera that is not afraid to allow subjects to walk in and out of the frame. The camera never feels compelled to chase its subject, nor does the director attempt to artificially superimpose the action of the camera against the actions of the characters. Only in a brief series of jump cuts as we witness Charlotte Rampling telling "us" about her breakdown, do we have "technique" rising above a point of sublimation. And even then the erratic cuts perfectly mirror the emotional instability of the subject. And while I'm on the subject of perfection, the production design of Mel Bourne creates a weekend movie retreat which connects us with a recognition of a lost world we perhaps never knew we'd lost. The splendor of an elegant resort hotel along a 1950's Jersey boardwalk seems in the present day a wistful retreat -- a bit dingy if not slightly tawdry -- a symbol of a promised world once imagined but never quite realized. But every bit equal to the power of the visuals is Allen's remarkable talent for matching period music to sustain mood. Yet I do not wish to speak of the music as the MUZAK. The music here is not used simply to sustain a mood as much as it uses its power to transform the audience into one who lives, for the moment, within the frame. Is there any music with greater power to transmogrify than Django Rinehart's guitar or Louis Armstrong's own version of "Stardust," which, in the end, shows us that the whole meaning of existence, for which some people search their whole lives, can be glimpsed in a single, ephemeral flicker of a moment. For those who travel in darkness, even the briefest glimmer of stars leaves the memory of the unlighted path. "Stardust Memories" sheds for us that kind of light.
Rating: Summary: Check your prejudices at the door -- this is great cinema! Review: Why do I choose to waste these few minutes of my life talking about a movie that few people have ever seen and that fewer still want to resurrect? If you mention a "Woody Allen Film" these days, you're bound to elicit one of a few choice conditioned responses - anything from, "Oh, I like his movies, especially the early, funny ones" or "Is he still making films?" The fact is that Woody Allen is one of the great filmmakers to grace the American cinema. Granted, his films today have lost some of their public lustre due to the travails of his personal life and the unbearable political incorrectness of being Woody. Yet fifty years from now, he will be spoken of without hesitation or apology with names such as Kubrick, Ford, Keaton, Spielberg or Malick as one of the greats. Some critics realized this more than twenty years ago and have conveniently forgotten it. But "Stardust Memories", if he never made another film, would insure his place among filmmaking elite. The movie in its time was castigated by critics because it presciently observed them as the high priests of a society which worships culture above art. Culture, of course, changes with the seasons but art is that constant which connects us to each other and the world throughout those changes. Further, it's release coincided with the death of John Lennon. The scene where Sandy Bates is shot by a crazed fan was uncomfortably closer to reality than the comic moment it wished to establish. Great movie, but it's release date just wasn't -- ahem! -- in the stars. "Stardust Memories" is as close to perfect a film as I have ever seen. It borrows the structural approach to its story from Fellini's "8 1/2" but is so true to its own purpose it never seems derivative. It complements the sublime black and white cinematography of Gordon Willis with the patience of a camera that is not afraid to allow subjects to walk in and out of the frame. The camera never feels compelled to chase its subject, nor does the director attempt to artificially superimpose the action of the camera against the actions of the characters. Only in a brief series of jump cuts as we witness Charlotte Rampling telling "us" about her breakdown, do we have "technique" rising above a point of sublimation. And even then the erratic cuts perfectly mirror the emotional instability of the subject. And while I'm on the subject of perfection, the production design of Mel Bourne creates a weekend movie retreat which connects us with a recognition of a lost world we perhaps never knew we'd lost. The splendor of an elegant resort hotel along a 1950's Jersey boardwalk seems in the present day a wistful retreat -- a bit dingy if not slightly tawdry -- a symbol of a promised world once imagined but never quite realized. But every bit equal to the power of the visuals is Allen's remarkable talent for matching period music to sustain mood. Yet I do not wish to speak of the music as the MUZAK. The music here is not used simply to sustain a mood as much as it uses its power to transform the audience into one who lives, for the moment, within the frame. Is there any music with greater power to transmogrify than Django Rinehart's guitar or Louis Armstrong's own version of "Stardust," which, in the end, shows us that the whole meaning of existence, for which some people search their whole lives, can be glimpsed in a single, ephemeral flicker of a moment. For those who travel in darkness, even the briefest glimmer of stars leaves the memory of the unlighted path. "Stardust Memories" sheds for us that kind of light.
Rating: Summary: A Forgotten Allen Classic Review: Woody Allen has been accused of making the same movies over and over again,and always playing the same character in his movies. People tend to forget that it's not Allen who were seeing on screen but a made up character that Allen has created. It's for this reason this film was verbally bashed by critics and audiences viewers alike upon it's release. Now of course as with any Allen film, non Allen fans will HATE the movie. They'll see it as self-indulgent as they see every other Allen picture. And they'll probably upon reading this review feel they HAVE to give me unhelpful vote. But for those of us who know something about movies and appreciate Allen's films this turns out to be a real treat. A very clever screenplay by Allen(as usual)mixed with Allen's wonderful sense of direction. I like all the performances in the film:Charlotte Rampling,Tony Roberts,Jessica Harper,and Marie-Christine Barrault. Beautiful photography by Gordon Willis shoot in black and white,whichs adds to the "magic" of the film. And as usually with all Allen films a great jazz score. I think it would be fair to say that perhaps this film among all of Allen's others films has aged better than most. So sit back and watch and enjoy.
|