Time Frames
(Page 2 of 2)
March/April 1997
By Simon Brennan, Utne Reader
5. D.O.A. (Rudolph Mate, 1950). You think you've got a hectic schedule? Edmund O'Brien has been given a poison that will finish him off in a matter of hours. This is the film that answers the age-old philosophical dilemma. "What would you do if you only had hours to live?" (The solution: "Hunt down the bum who slipped me a mickey and kill him.")
RELATED CONTENT
It used to be that you could tell a despot by the audacity of his eyewear. Think Robert Mugabe with...
For a believer in spiritual magic and the Tarot, a disengaged life was never in the cards.......
Many revolutions fail when they tear down one system only to replace it with another embodying the...
Global warming could force preservationists to become zookeepers and gardeners...
6. Koyaanisqatsi (Godfrey Reggio, 1983). In this reductio ad absurdum visual feast about the ills of urban living vs. the good old natural way, Reggio, a former monk, investigates the Hopi term "life out of balance." His ideas are best captured in the surrealistic time-lapse sequences of traffic in New York City and Los Angeles. This movie will leave you with a sinking feeling that if you look at The Big City with any longing at all, you'll soon join Lot's wife on the condiment shelf.
7. Local Hero (Bill Forsyth, 1983). With a high-rise Houston apartment, a high-maintenance oil company job, and a high-stakes deal in the offing, merger-meister Peter Reigert's life has all the modern cons, but no soul. A dreamy Scottish seaside village--which he's trying to buy--un-locks his doors of perception and calms his workaday heart..
8. Clockwise (Christopher Morahan, 1986). In this version of The Wizard of Oz as Salvador Dali might have imagined it (minus the melting clocks), John Cleese plays a person who is prompt to the point of rudeness and tempts the ire of Father Time and his all-girl orchestra. For serving the false god of punctuality, Cleese is, of course, damned to lateness like everyone else.
9. The Paper (Ron Howard, 1994). City editor Michael Keaton is staring down the barrel of a nasty deadline, his editor in chief is seriously ailing, the New York Times is dangling a job offer in front of him, and his pregnant-at-home wife really needs his attention. Does journalism stand a chance?
10. Nick of Time (John Badham, 1995). This film provides an extreme definition of the word "deadline." Johnny Depp has been given the choice of killing the governor of California or seeing his daughter killed instead. Talk about pressure. If you feel restless, that's the point. Never one for subtlety, Badham throws in clocks everywhere so you won't forget that time is not your friend.
Page:
<< Previous 1 | 2 |