The assassin's creed: If at first you don't succeed, try, try again.
A mere functionary like Leo Pfeffer can be told what to think; he has less luck convincing others.
A randomly comprehensive survey of extraordinary movie experiences from the art house to the grindhouse, featuring the good, the bad, the ugly, but not the boring or the banal.
In the U.S. Renzo Martinelli's would-be epic has the title of a generic war film. That probably infuriated a director who opened the film with a quote from 20th century French historian (and victim of the Nazis) Marc Bloch: "Misunderstanding of the present grows fatally from ignorance of the past." In Martinelli's home country, Day of the Siege is known as 11 Settembre 1683. On that day, the siege of Vienna by the Ottoman Turks was broken by an attack by a Polish army led by King Jan Sobieski. Martinelli's Italo-Polish production credits this rescue of Christendom from the last great Islamic military assault to date to the Polish king (played by director Jerzy Skolimowski) and an Italian friar, Marco d'Aviano (F. Murray Abraham), who was the spiritual adviser to the Emperor of Austria. The Poles, presumably having less of an agenda, or more likely seeing an existential threat coming from a different direction, call this movie The Battle of Vienna. For Martinelli and his writers, however, the immediate agenda is Islamophobic, though their hackneyed commitment to the conventions of historical drama, and perhaps a degree of good taste, make the film less of a hatefest than it could have been.
It isn't exactly accurate to describe Michael Haneke's film as an unflinching look at aging and death. By my standard, Haneke does flinch near the end, opting for a sudden catharsis or climax rather than taking the ride to its proper end. The climax really makes Amour about something besides aging and death, but you'll have noticed that the film is titled neither Aging nor Death. That title may be a deliberate echo of the movie film buffs remembered octogenarian Best Actress nominee Emmanuelle Riva for before this one: Alain Resnais' Hiroshima Mon Amour. But while the Academy, always impressed by affliction, has recognized Riva, and quite rightly, the title really refers to the plight of her co-star and fellow Nouvelle Vague veteran Jean-Louis Trintignant. He plays the husband of Riva's stricken pianist, and his character faces the universal dilemma of what to do for, or about, a loved one who feels her life is over, no longer worth living, and who may be objectively correct. What you may have heard about Amour is that Haneke is unflinching in his depiction, and Riva in her portrayal, of the woman's physical, emotional and mental deterioration. That may have been confirmed subjectively by an overheard audience member who lamented that the film might make people want to slit their throats. It's tough material, sure, but some of us are made of tougher stuff than that. I was toughened by some personal experience of death and by reading Phillip Roth's last run of death-haunted novels. If you can stand Everyman ("Old age isn't a battle; it's a massacre.") you can deal with Amour, though the added visual element may make the movie more challenging. In fact, I'm tempted to say they should give Riva the Oscar for sheer fearlessness in doing a nude scene -- she's being washed by a nurse in a shower -- at age 85. What might make Amour even harder to take is that, while Roth told his late stories from the vantage of his faltering yet still basically sentient protagonists, Haneke compels you to empathize with someone watching a loved one irreversibly deteriorate. We're dealing with two kinds of helplessness, one of which can't be helped while the other always second guesses itself. The Trintignant character strives to normalize his and Riva's predicament, and the effort rings true. In part it's a vain hope that the situation will stabilize, that you'll reach a new normal and stay there, and in part the day-to-day adaptation is the new normal. You see that when Haneke contrasts Trintignant's exhausted calm with the horrified panic of Isabelle Huppert, playing the couple's daughter who only drops in occasionally and thus only sees a crisis. For those on the ground, a long dying does establish a normality that Haneke depicts with enough accuracy for Amour to live up to its advance notices. He does this so well that it seemed disappointingly predictable that he opted for shock. Even then, the climactic act raises fair questions in keeping with the overall theme and the title. Is it an act of love or a lapse from love? You'll have to see it to decide, but once you see it you should be able to appreciate either side of the question.
The pilgrimage shrine at the spring where St. Bernadette is said to have seen the Virgin Mary, where the waters are reputed to have healing powers for the faithful, has been a ripe subject for satire almost from the beginning. In Austrian director Jessica Hausner Lourdes has found a relatively benign satirist. She avoids what might look like the obvious object of satire from the secular humanist perspective, the mythos of heavenly visitations and miraculous healings. Instead of an attack on faith and spirituality, Lourdes is a critique of the de-sacralization of the pilgrimage experience through custom, bureaucracy and commodification.