Shocktober Day 19: Audition

Audition (1999)

The last time I saw Audition I didn’t like it. I felt the film started promising, building like a taught Hitchcockian thriller, before descending into a full-on vomit-a-thon. This was five or six years ago. Flash forward to earlier yesterday when I tried to watch the film once more. Again, I loved the first half of the film, but the climax? I liked. It’s still vomit inducing, but I get it now. It helped knowing how the events of the film were going to play out this time. Now I know this film needs the shift in style to hammer home its themes. Audition is a film about objectification and how all of us can become victims… and predators.

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iDick

Steve Jobs

Despite the fact that we can probably say Steve Jobs helped shape the times we live in about as much as anyone, I can’t say I know much about the man behind the turtleneck.  And there’s certainly been a lot of attempts to unravel who exactly Jobs was ever since his passing in 2011 in the form of books and documentaries and the other, presumably shittier Jobs movie.  But perhaps because the movie Steve Jobs has been in development for so long, and has had such an impressive amount of talent attached to it, this has been the document of the Apple founder/CEO that I’ve been waiting for to bring me closer to this complicated genius.  However, I now realize that that makes no sense at all since this is an Aaron Sorkin screenplay, and much like Sorkin’s script for The Social Network, you can probably assume he’s playing pretty fast and loose with the facts here.  That said, I more-or-less believe that movies have no obligation to be beholden to the truth as long as you believe what is happening onscreen, which I basically felt with Steve Jobs, while also finding a lot of aspects of it to be pretty riveting.

Another reason Steve Jobs doesn’t by any means feel like a definitive document of the man (which it clearly isn’t trying to be), is its structure and the events it covers.  The film takes place in three distinct segments, each taking place backstage before one of Jobs’ many product launches — in 1984 for the launch of the Macintosh computer, in 1988 before the launch of Next, and then in 1998 prior to launch of the iMac.  Two out of the three products here were more-or-less failures in the public eye, which maybe doesn’t do much to illuminate the many triumphs of the man, but I think do effectively illuminate the internal creative and personal struggles of Steve Jobs, or at least whatever version of him Sorkin and director Danny Boyle are deciding to portray here.

And the Steve Jobs we get here, much like the Mark Zuckerberg of The Social Network, is a difficult visionary who is often unwilling to bend or break whatever vision he has for the people around him.  The person who spends the most of the movie’s running time talking to Jobs is Joanna Hoffman (played by Kate Winslet), who for all I know could’ve been a completely fictional character just constructed for the film, but was in fact quite real and was known as one of the few people to work at Apple capable of standing up to Jobs, which the film suitably paints her as.  Jobs’ other verbal sparring partners come in the form of John Sculley (Jeff Daniels), the Apple CEO who fired Jobs’ from his own company; Steve Wozniak (Seth Rogan), Apple’s contentious co-founder; and his ex-wife (Catherine Waterstone) and daughter Lisa, whom Jobs spends most of the movie denying money to.  And that’s pretty much all of the characters in the film (Michael Stuhlbarg occasionally shows up as Andy Hertzfeld), which combined with the film’s minimal locations, makes the film feel a lot like a stage play (despite not being based on one) and yet at the same time effortlessly cinematic.

Now let’s talk about Michael Fassbender for a bit.  For the past few years, he’s established himself as one of the new faces of prestige movie acting, as he clearly has an effortless presence and charisma onscreen, and has yet to really play an entirely likable leading-man type.  Fassbender’s Jobs of course is no where near as unseemly as his sadistic slaveowner in 12 Years A Slave or the wallowing sex-addict of Shame, but he is more often than not a consummate dick that contains little in the way of seeing beyond his own aspirations and ego.  Much of this is exemplified by his inability to accept his alleged daughter Lisa as his own, as well as his inability to accept his buddy Woz, or anyone else in his life as responsible for the success or innovations of Apple.  And I wouldn’t say it ever feels like Fassbender is doing an impression of Jobs, and instead much like Jesse Eisenberg’s Mark Zuckerberg in The Social Network, feels more like a vessel for human ambition propelled by snarky intelligence rather than the real guy.  Which is maybe a bit questionable with a more public figure like Steve Jobs, but nonetheless makes for a character that’s uniformly riveting and hard to take your eyes off of.

And I would say for the most part, this is a film that’s hard to take your eyes off of.  Danny Boyle has established himself as a director with a particularly kinetic style, and apart from a few visual flourishes that are somewhat Boyle-esque, I think Sorkin’s densely talky script keeps these tendencies at just the right level of hyperactivity.  However, I will say that both Boyle and Sorkin do sometimes have a tendency to let themselves get a little treacly at times, and the film’s ending veers a little too far into that territory for my tastes, especially when the film’s 14-year timespan would indicate that Steve Jobs was always a dick and was always going to be a dick, which the film’s somewhat fluffy ending attempts to undercut.  But the fact of the matter is, I am always going to be prone to hearing this kind of smart, tightly-constructed banter onscreen, since it’s not just that we don’t get enough films like these nowadays, it’s that they’re practically extinct.  I guess blame it all on people’s inability to take their eyes off their god damn iPhones.

Shocktober Day 18: Ringu

Ringu (1998)

It’s amazing how similar the American and Japanese version of Ringu are. They both draw from Koji Suzuki’s 1991 novel, but the American version is almost an exact carbon copy, from the aesthetic of the cursed videotape, to every suspenseful beat. Don’t get me wrong, I like Gore Verbinski’s version. I like the American version’s polished effects and the fact it was set in in my beloved Seattle, but it’s the Japanese version that should be remembered. It did most of the same things better and earlier. It’s rare I’ve seen a film this scary and yet so subtle. Hideo Nakata’s version doesn’t need big effects or a big budget. The horror in his is cerebral. What’s scary isn’t necessarily what you see on screen, it’s the implication. It’s what gets stuck in your head for days after you’ve seen the film. It follows you. Just like a cursed videotape.

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Shocktober Day 17: Perfect Blue

Perfect Blue (1997)

Maybe I was always going to love whatever the next movie I watched after Twilight was, but damn, dude. Damn! I’ve been wanting to check out the works of Satoshi Kon for a long time, particularly Paprika, and now it’s become important I do so once we’re done with Shocktober. At only 87 minutes, Perfect Blue never had a chance to do anything but lock me into its twisted world. Really, the biggest caveat I can think of is that it’s hard to convince other people to watch an anime, even if it’s a stand-alone compl–I mean movie.
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Shocktober Day 16: Cronos

Cronos (1993)

What a coincidence we selected Cronos to review on the opening weekend of Guillermo del Toro’s newest film Crimson Peak. This Mexican makeup effects maestro turned visionary filmmaker has come a long way. Though even with his first film his style and storytelling sensibility is fully formed, like a butterfly freed from its cocoon. Though far from his best film, Cronos is an excellent prelude to what would come in Del Toro’s later years. Let us enter the labyrinth of Cronos.

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Shocktober Day 15: Tetsuo: The Iron Man

Tetsuo: The Iron Man (1989)

Let me tell you about the most I ever threw up. It was a few days after Christmas in 2007 when I came down with a bad stomach flu. I remember it was 2007 because I got The Simpsons Movie for Christmas. While it would have been nice to watch the movie, instead I spent the whole day bedridden, vomiting into a bucket. Sometimes I’d fall asleep and have fever dreams about Tetris. I don’t know why Tetris. After awhile, it was hard to tell when I was awake and when I was asleep. It was a nightmarish experience I still remember to this day. Tetsuo: The Iron Man is kind of like that day.

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T3 95: Top 10 Fruit

I had myself a little brush with death this week. At the very beginning of my morning commute, I got t-boned. It’s kind of hard to process, but I’m OK, the other driver’s OK, both our cars are only a little messed up. Events like this are supposed to make you think, right? Maybe I should be doing more with my life. Maybe instead of spending my time recording podcasts with my friends about the best snacks or breakfast cereals, I should do something that really matters. Something that’s healthy and important. Like talk about the top 10 kinds of fruit. Yeah, that’s what life’s all about.

Top Ways to Listen:
[iTunes] Subscribe to T3 on iTunes
[RSS] Subscribe to the T3 RSS feed
[MP3] Download the MP3

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