Sunday Morning: “Bad Day at Black Rock” by John Sturges

Rufus F.

Rufus is a likeable curmudgeon. He has a PhD in History, sang for a decade in a punk band, and recently moved to NYC after nearly two decades in Canada. He wrote the book "The Paris Bureau" from Dio Press (2021).

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26 Responses

  1. dhex says:

    another fine essay, rufus!

    a friend of mine got me to sit down and watch the dredd remake. in addition to being fun, there were some notable bits which may dovetail to the essay above (about an excellent film):

    1) there was no real backstory, nor harping on backstory. things are messed up totally and…that’s all you get. such a wonderful break from exposition on top of exposition stuffed with more exposition.

    2) the characters all react believably to events. it’s a goofy world, but a coherent one.

    3) the runtime was so reasonable! 90 minutes, in and out, just like grandma used to make.

    4) conservation of dialogue, which supports and is buffeted by point #1 above. the setting is a brutal, horrible place, and chit chat with strangers is treated like the potentially deadly encounters it could rapidly turn into.

    5) said friend has never seen the raid, so now i get to introduce one of the finest actions films ever made to her. woot!Report

    • Rufus F. in reply to dhex says:

      I’m not sure why 90 minutes became the standard for so long- it must have to do with reel length, but I am becoming a huge fan of the done in an hour and a half standard. When you get to 3 hours for a movie, it’s usually easy to see what could have been cut.

      I remember really loving Dredd, which was also much closer to the comic books than the earlier attempt to adapt them to film. I was a fan of the comics when I was a teenager, probably because Anthrax wrote a song about them. I need to rewatch the Raid soon too.Report

      • Michael Cain in reply to Rufus F. says:

        Reel length seems reasonable. Most movies were shipped on reels each with 2,000 feet of 35mm film, which ran just over 22 minutes. So four reels is about 89 minutes. In the days when the studios were cranking out hundreds of films per year, there was probably a lot of pressure on directors to cut things to under 90 minutes, just to avoid the printing and shipping costs of an extra reel.

        When my dad was about 16, he ran the projection booth for the theater in the tiny Iowa town where he grew up. Film was highly flammable, and the light source was open carbon arc lamps. (In an amazing “coincidence”, the length of the carbon rods burned up in the lamps was such that the lamps had a lifetime of just over 22 minutes.) When he went to college on the GI Bill, his short story “The Night the Film Broke” was accepted for the university’s literary magazine.Report

  2. Jaybird says:

    Freddie wrote a fun post complaining about Stranger Things a few days ago. One of his complaints is that every five minutes doesn’t need to be a cliffhanger.

    You want some time to breathe.

    If you’ve ever wondered about whether you want to play a video game that doesn’t suck, I’d suggest Disco Elysium. You play a detective who wakes up hungover as heck and he’s fixing to solve a murder case. The body is out back, by the way. And there are a whole bunch of people who were involved. And you get to talk to them.Report

    • Rufus F. in reply to Jaybird says:

      I feel like Stranger Things could end now and it would be fine. Honestly, I think it could have ended with two seasons and been fine. Or been a trilogy of films and said all the same things. I get that people enjoy streaming series and I can watch them, but they frequently tell a three act story that could have also been a movie without losing much.Report

      • InMD in reply to Rufus F. says:

        My wife and I finished season 4 on Friday. I’m going to watch it until the end due to sunk cost fallacy but it has definitely passed the point of way more run time than it has the story to tell.Report

        • Rufus F. in reply to InMD says:

          I feel like there needs to be a parent stepping in- maybe the Duffer Mother?- to lecture them with something like “No new characters until you figure out what to do with all the characters you have!”Report

      • Jaybird in reply to Rufus F. says:

        After Steve stopped being a jerk, I couldn’t get enough of Season 1 and Season 2 surprised me with how much fun it was.

        Season 3 has me mostly saying “oof” and “I remember that!” and I only kinda enjoy the latter.Report

  3. Saul Degraq says:

    A great film. I am currently reading Trust by Hernan Diaz which is about a lonely and enigmatic financier named Benjamin Rask who grows even more wealthy from Black Friday of 1929 and how that arises more suspicion. The novel is divided into four parts, each with a different author. There is also a novel within a novel that takes New York by storm in 1937.Report

  4. Saul Degraw says:

    I rewatched the 1996 Irma Vep movie from Oliver Assayas. A lot of the beats were very much “this is a foreign/indie film from the 1990s” and the commentary on French film’s place in the world requires someone to know a bit of French film.

    For those who don’t know: Les Vampires was a classic French series from the early 1900s about a criminal gang called Les Vampires who are lead by a the beguiling Irma Vep. In the 1996 movie, a washed up French director is tasked to doing a remake of Les Vampires and he decides to cast Maggie Chueng as Irma Vep. The washed up film director is played by Jean-Pierre Leaud who is most famous as Truffaut’s alterego, Antoine Doniel.

    Other than that, the film is pretty mediocre and I am not sure why it is considered to be a 1990s classic. Enough of a classic that HBO Max decided to make a TV series out of it. The 1996 movie seems to mainly consist of Maggie Cheung being very politely confused most of the time. The biggest subplot involves the wardrobe lady having a crush on Maggie and trying to seduce her awkwardly. Maggie finds this out from an older woman (who might be married to the cinematographer of Irma Vep, it is unclear) asking her “do you like to sleep with girls?” in broken but blunt English and then spilling the beans that the wardrobe lady likes her. This is not the only person on the film crew that tries to seduce Maggie Cheung. Though I suppose in 1996, casting a Hong Kong actor in a European movie would have been more of a novelty than it is today. There is a also a little press interview where Maggie Cheung defends state-sponsored French cinema from a young, brash reporter who thinks French film is only “for the intellectuals.”Report

    • Rufus F. in reply to Saul Degraw says:

      Yeah, we were talking recently about Irma Vep. My film writer girlfriend was saying she saw it at the time and thought it was just okay. People seem to really love it for some reason. I haven’t seen it, although I’ve seen the silent films. I should probably get around to watching the movie at least.Report

      • Saul Degraw in reply to Rufus F. says:

        I just watched an episode of the HBO max reinterpretation Irma Vep (also by Assayas) and I hated it even more. The characters are all nastier and more mean-spirited. The first episode spent a lot of time on a weird Lesbian subplot with psychodrama as S&M*. It felt like something “oh so very French” for Americans.

        *The imported actress playing Irma Vep is now a big American movie star. She was sleeping with and cheating on her assistant. The assistant decided to leave and go hetero and marry a big time action director (the director of her latest blockbuster). The opening scenes had the actress state that open relationships do not have to be equal for all. The subsequent scenes have the tables turned and have the former assistant dominating and the actress begging her the come back. I just found everyone unlikable.Report

    • InMD in reply to Saul Degraw says:

      I think in the 90s there was still a supply constraint that rendered pretty much everything that made it over here a candidate for classic status. My mother came to the US from France as a child and her and my dad would see every French movie. Every once in awhile they’d go to a theater but for a married couple raising kids in the ‘burbs that mostly translated to everything on the 4 or 5 little shelves in the back of the local Blockbuster. I can very much see how something like Irma Vep would have been a novelty to an American audience at the time but now seems silly or trite.Report

  5. Saul Degraw says:

    I’ve also began to watch For All Mankind on Apple TV, it is an alternative history series where the Soviets beat the Americans to the moon by about 2.5-3 weeks and this is a catalyst for the space race never ending. Right before the American’s attempt their second moonlanding, the Soviets get the first woman on the moon. This causes Nixon to think he needs to get American women to the Moon ASAP, etc. The series is a lot better than the premise sounds but the 2nd and 3rd Seasons are supposed to be much better than the 1st.Report

  6. Doctor Jay says:

    I have heard about this film for maybe 2 decades, but I have never seen it. What is y’alls go-to for viewing classic films?Report

  7. Slade the Leveller says:

    I’ve been watching Severance of late. Mark’s reason for joining Lumon hits a bit close to home, but I kind of like the foreboding atmosphere of the show. It’s quite strange.Report

    • Saul Degraw in reply to Slade the Leveller says:

      I gave up on that show because I think it raised more questions than answers. The show would have benefited from being given a strict limit. “You have 11 episodes. That is it. There will not be a second season. We expect a beginning, middle, and end.” Basically, a BBC show, not an American one which looks to exist for perpetuity.Report

  8. Burt Likko says:

    So many western movies (or movies needing to depict desolation) use the Owens Valley for it. Owens Valley was one of my playgrounds as a teen and young man and I still periodically visit there even after moving out of California. My mom is buried within a couple of miles of the locations used for this movie.

    Recognizing Los Angeles or New York locations is one thing. Owens Valley locations feel special to me, more personal.Report