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![]() Black & White and Red All Over Pastiching Steven Soderbergh's "The Good German"
In "Casablanca," did Ilsa like it from behind? In "The Third Man,"
what corny-porny pictures did Holly Martins masturbate to? When would
Bogart have called another man a "cunt" or a "cocksucker"? Could the
director of "Schizopolis" and "Full Frontal" have fit into the
"genius of the system" that enabled the careers of directors like
Michael Curtiz?
Those are questions that rattle around in the head while watching
Steven Soderbergh's latest adroit atomization of form (if not function),
"The Good German" (adapted by Paul Attanasio from Joseph Kanon's 2003
novel). The restless technician limits himself in this black-and-white
picture to the equipment available to the filmmakers of the era in which
the movie is set: a 1.66 to 1 screen ratio; using only overhead boom
mikes; the kind of prime, non-zoom lenses and battened-down camera
positions available to someone like, say, Carol Reed with "The Third
Man" (1949) (at least without the canted angles) or Billy Wilder with
"A Foreign Affair" (1948). Some of the use of smoke and light,
especially against night backdrops, is hauntingly memorable.
The Byzantine plot throws New Republic journalist Jake Geismer
(George Clooney) into the web of former lover Ilsa (Cate Blanchett
channeling Marlene Dietrich) and her current lover-pimp, sewer-mouthed
Tulley (Tobey Maguire enjoying a chance to be an over-the-top
shit-heel), while dark secrets about war crimes, rocket science and the
murder of Jews pile up. (The coldly ironic ending is a beauty in more
ways than one.)
A beautiful stunt made with Soderbergh's customary stellar craft
(with the close collaboration of his nom-de-pseuds, editor "Mary Ann
Bernard" and cinematographer "Peter Andrews"), the result, despite
game performances in a declarative 1940s style by Clooney, Blanchett and
Maguire, remains chilly. There's anachronism in both directions,
technically backward-looking but studded with a crudeness of language
where "fucking fuck" is a frequent refrain.
There are multiple (unreliable) narrators; everyone's delivery is
declarative, declamatory, definitive; the acting style is led by
Clooney's chin-wagging and head-wobbling; there are shots held long
after one character leaves the room and the other contemplates the
finished scene; plucky harp strings in Thomas Newman's score suggestive
of the ubiquitous zither in "The Third Man." The Newman clan,
including cousin Randy, comes from a long line of Hollywood composers;
Thomas does a fine job with other, more sweeping passages in the idioms
of father Alfred, brother David and uncle Lionel.
Still, a pastiche that conflates greats like "Casablanca" and "The
Third Man" as well as a protagonist-patsy who galumphs through most of
the movie with a crude bandage on a sliced ear (like Jack Nicholson's
nose-plaster in "Chinatown") is to be preferred over any of the
extremely profitable but smug "Oceans" endeavors (there's a third in
the works), the success of which allow Soderbergh's workaholic pace and
investigational endeavors. (And like most of his smaller films, the
artistic virtues of "German" will be trumpeted less in its coverage
than its chilly commercial chances.)
Despite the convolutions, there's a sorrowful extra layer of
latter-day resonance, that the endless grifting in the postwar
reconstruction of the four sectors of Berlin, patterned after the
terrible crimes in "The Third Man," resounds clear as a bell to the
increasingly horrific stories of contemporary war profiteering in
post-occupation Iraq. Divided Berlin; divided Baghdad. A general says
"We're doing a hell of a job in Berlin," an equally frightening
parallel to today's doings, and Clooney's character is an
avant-le-lettre embedded journo, with a U. S. War Correspondent patch on
an Army-issue suit, plus a general says, covering up the death of a
soldier, "his family doesn't need to know anything more than that he
crashed his jeep trying to avoid a bunny rabbit."
Mouthfuls of dialogue come fast and furious: "The whole city spread
its legs for you, all that eat, drink and be merry bullshit, seize the
day, it sure don't make anyone smarter and the best thing of it was no
one got hurt"; "money allows you to be who you truly are"; "like you
should be fucking fucking General Eisenhower, countess roundheels?";
"you're out there selling Love you don't have. He's not a bad sort,
just a bit of a cunt"; "Lena was raped by the Russians, you'll get
yourself a good dose." If you're a moviegoer who can walk out humming
the scenery, "The Good German" is a good dose as well. "The Good German" opens Friday.
Also by Ray Pride Tip of the Week
Sentence Life
Gone Green Again
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One Long Movie
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School of Cock
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Children Afraid of the Night
Craig, Daniel Craig
Tip of the Week
A Chicago Like No Other
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