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A classic

Posted : 5 years, 11 months ago on 15 May 2018 08:04

Since this movie is a classic, I was really eager to check it out. To be honest, it took me a while to get into the damned thing. It probably had to do with the fact that Iā€™m not a huge fan of musicals in general but Bob Fosse is one director who was really able to flawlessly combine musical numbers within a straightforward story. On top of that, his musicals were quite dark, at least, the ones he filmed, much darker than your average musical and it made them much more interesting to behold. Finally, I was quite impressed by Roy Scheider who played something completely different than his usual characters and he gave here probably his best performance. To be honest, the whole thing still felt like a huge egotrip obviously inspired by ā€˜8 1/2ā€™ from Federico Fellini but, eventually, what really sold the movie to me was the final scene. Indeed, it was an impressive dance sequence involving some hallucinations and it was just so dark and thrilling at the same time. Futhermore, since it was about Bob Fosseā€™s life and since he was still alive to direct this movie, I expected the main character to make it so I was really surprised that the guy actually died at the end which was seriously bleak but also really bold and fascinating. To conclude, I think I will re-watch it at some point to make up my mind about the damned thing but it is definitely worth a look, especially if you like the genre or if you are interested in Bob Fosseā€™s work.Ā 



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All That Jazz

Posted : 8 years, 1 month ago on 29 March 2016 04:23

Heavily indebted to Federico Felliniā€™s 8 Ā½ in its combination of reality and fantasy in exploring the artistic mind and temperament, All That Jazz is a reflective, energetic movie about a genius director/choreographer grappling with impending death. For such weighty material, All That Jazz feels incredibly alive, joyous even in its combination of self-examination and mordant humor.

Ā 

Bob Fosse was one of the greats. Whether talking about choreography or directing, Fosse must be mentioned in the pantheon of world-class level masters of the craft. His film career got to a bumpy start with Sweet Charity, but his next feature, Cabaret, was a work of absolute greatness. He changed the musical not only on stage with works like Chicago and Pippin, but in the movies, with the game-changing editing tricks of All That Jazz and Cabaret.

Ā 

Fosse turns his camera into a scan of his own brain, body, and soul. All That Jazz is littered with self-reflective choices, from storytelling beats, character relationships and interactions, to casting choices. Based on the time in Fosseā€™s life when he was editing Lenny and prepping Pippin for its Broadway debut, the film follows the trials and tribulations of Joe Gideon (Roy Scheider), as he juggles his directing duties with his relationships with his ex-wife (Leland Palmer), his girlfriend (Ann Reinking), his daughter (Erzsebet Foldi), and the angel of death, Angelique (Jessica Lange).

Ā 

Love and death are eternally twisting and contorting around each other, and Gideon/Fosse are constantly reflecting, or deflecting, their own mortality and moral culpability. Palmerā€™s Gwen Verdon stand-in has an equally complex relationship with the fictional Fosse, as she is starring in his new stage show as a mea culpa from him for his years of philandering. While Reinking is doing a spin on her actual life at the time, and her presence is no less complicated as she is one of the three muses who chastise and celebrate him during his hospital hallucinations.

Ā 

The most obvious example of this moral and mortality, love and death geometry are the frequent cutaways to a hallucinatory mind palace where Gideon flirts, argues, and makes a case for his life with Angelique. Langeā€™s natural coolness is used to tremendous effect here as she mostly sits impassively and calls him out on his bullshit, appearing almost charmed and entertained by his continual copping out.

Ā 

All That Jazz never asks for us to like Gideon, only to try and understand him even as he exhibits self-destructive and questionable behavior. Heā€™s a fascinating, complex character, brought to fully lived-in life by Roy Scheider, in a performance that should have gotten him an Oscar but he was up against Dustin Hoffmanā€™s more likable protagonist in Kramer vs Kramer. Scheiderā€™s cracked handsome face can project a tremendous amount of emotional range and complexity with relatively little movement. He does a tour de force of minimalistic acting in ā€œBye Bye Life,ā€ an extended death rattle in Gideonā€™s imaginary life.

Ā 

For all of Gideonā€™s obsession with his mortality, given a not-so-subtle hint in his morning ritual of eye drops, Alka-Seltzer, Dexedrine, ever-present cigarette and daily dose of sex, turns his imaginary life into an Ingmar Bergman-like confessional. We trace his history, his penchant for mordant humor, and cathartic peace making with the important individuals in his life. For all the obsessive flirtations and ruminations on mortality, All That Jazz is the liveliest tango with death youā€™ll ever watch.

Ā 

The sweaty bodies in geometric patterns and angular movements of Fosseā€™s choreography are all there, and his dancer orgy is one of the great extended dance sequences in cinema. Yet what really lingers in Fosseā€™s dark humor, or the way he undercuts his brilliant choreography with a punchline. After the erotic dance is completed, his backers are in a frenzy of complaints about its vulgarity. Or how he cross-cuts between his beautiful imagination, and his open-heart surgery. Or how he drops in a meeting with his backers learning that if he dies, and they let the show die, theyā€™ll walk away with a fortune, in effect allowing Angelique to get a two-for-one special. But no joke is quite as dark as the final image, with Gideonā€™s body getting wrapped up in a bag as Ethel Merman belts out ā€œThereā€™s No Business Like Show Businessā€ over the soundtrack. Itā€™s a sick joke, but itā€™s also a brilliant bit of editing.

Ā 

Viciously honest, All That Jazz is a masterpiece of the artist at work, at the end of his life, and a dazzling piece of eye candy. But thereā€™s more to it than its sweaty, grimy, beautiful, and haunted surface textures, as the narrative is a bounty of rich, dense dramatic material. Fosse only made five films, two of which are pinnacles of the movie musical that completely changed how we viewed their editing and emotional tactile senses. This is the movie that Nine tried to be.



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