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The CAPTAIN (AMERICA, that is) and the CONDOR

07 Monday Apr 2014

Posted by cinepam in Reviews

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Captain America: The Winter Soldier, Chris Evans, Robert Redford, Sydney Pollack, Three Days of the Condor

Captain-America-The-Winter-Soldier-Captain-America-and-Alexander-PiercePlus ça change, plus c’est la même chose. The more things change, the more they stay the same. Robert Redford’s very presence in the blockbuster Captain America: The Winter Soldier lends truth to that 19th-century epigram, coined by writer Jean-Baptiste Alphonse Karr. Not because that august actor has spent much time among superheroes, spandex, CGI, and larger-than-life combat. In fact, Captain America is a first in a career that is now into its sixth decade. But in taking part in this mammoth entertainment Redford inadvertently calls forth memories of one of his classic ’70s movies, Sydney Pollack’s Three Days of the Condor.

At a glance, Captain America: The Winter Soldier and Three Days of the Condor would appear to have little beyond Redford in common. The latter is a 1975 paranoid thriller, short on action but high in suspense as Redford plays Joseph Turner, a CIA member – not a spy, but a reader whose job it is to ferret out whatever intelligence can be gleaned from poring over books, newspapers, and magazines – who becomes a target after his entire section is killed while he’s at lunch. The stakes are higher in Captain America as the titular superhero Steve Rogers (Chris Evans) fights to save humanity from those who would enslave it in vicious battles that range from urban warfare to skirmishes in the sky against hordes of committed killers and one seemingly unstoppable Winter Soldier (Sebastian Stan).

Three Days of the Condor (1975)

For all the films’ surface differences, the similarities are striking. In both, the guiding principle is “Trust no one,” advice explicitly given Rogers by his boss Nick Fury (Samuel L. Jackson) and quickly understood by Turner when his attempt to come in from the cold goes awry. The CIA, for which Turner toils, has been compromised from within, and so has SHIELD, the agency that employees Rogers.

Three Days of the Condor, adapted from James Grady’s 1974 novel Six Days of the Condor, reflects the cynicism of the Watergate era. Coming out in the aftermath of WikiLeaks’ many exposés and Edward Snowden’s revelations about NSA spying, Captain America: The Winter Soldier, adapted from the Marvel comic book series, expresses this era’s distrust of institutions in a plot that ups the ante: The duplicitous faction of the CIA in Three Days of the Condor only mean to wreak havoc in part of the world, while the criminal elements in SHIELD want to take over the entire planet.

Redford’s presence ties the two films together. Joseph Turner is not the idealist that Steve Rogers is, but his honest skepticism makes him a hero for his times just as Captain America is for his. More intriguing is the part that Redford plays in Captain America, Alexander Pierce, the head of the World Security Council and a former SHIELD leader, a man as slippery as they come and a character that resembles J. Higgins (Cliff Robertson), Turner’s tricky CIA superior. Both men make a stab at projecting honesty and moral authority. Yet, it’s hard to imagine buying a used car from either one of them, let alone trusting them with your life as Rogers and Turner are asked to do. Redford’s role has changed, but the shady bosses haven’t. The more things change, the more they stay the same. —Pam Grady

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Review: Redford battles the elements in ALL IS LOST

25 Friday Oct 2013

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All Is Lost, J.C. Chandor, Robert Redford

photodazastills_1774.CR2

Call it The Old Hunk and the Sea. With All Is Lost, matinee idol for the ages Robert Redford sheds all vanity to play a man struggling to survive against long odds in J.C. Chandor’s first feature since he burst on the scene with 2011’s acclaimed talk fest Margin Call. The writer/director veers into a completely different direction with this thriller, a near-silent drama that offers Redford a solo spotlight. The actor answers with one of his finest performances in years.

The credits refer to the 76-year-old Redford’s character as simply “Our Man.” Apparently a well-off retiree who heeded the siren song of the sea, he is sailing alone in the Indian Ocean when catastrophe hits and his boat is damaged. There is worse to come with bad weather and even worse luck. With electrical systems down, a busted radio and no GPS, Our Man’s best chance for survival is to set a course the old-fashioned way using the sun, moon, stars and nautical charts to find a shipping lane where a passing freighter might spot him. The pleasure cruise turns into a constant battle to stay afloat so that he might make it that far.

Shot in the Pacific Ocean, the Caribbean Sea and the huge Baja, Mexico filming tank that James Cameron built when he made Titanic, All Is Lost derives plenty of suspense from the imagery alone of a small vessel against a great expanse of water. Add to that all the things that befall the boat and the advanced age of the sailor and the ingredients are in place for a first-class thriller. But Chandor takes a big risk with a story that is almost dialogue-free and a character who can’t help but remain an enigma with no name and no back story. We know little about Our Man other than that he’s elderly, still athletic and competent. It is up to Redford to make us care and he does that beautifully with a graceful performance that quietly expresses equal measures of vulnerability, strength, heart and a will to live that cannot be quenched even in the most dire of circumstances. All Is Lost is a suspenseful thriller, but what makes its special is its human drama of one man pitted against the merciless sea. – Pam Grady

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The silence of survival: J.C. Chandor on ALL IS LOST

24 Thursday Oct 2013

Posted by cinepam in Interviews

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All Is Lost, J.C. Chandor, Robert Redford

photodazastills_3569.CR2J.C. Chandor’s last film Margin Call was all talk as a large voluble ensemble that included Jeremy Irons, Kevin Spacey, Zachary Quinto and Simon Baker played Wall Street masters of the universe caught in the panic of the 2008 financial crisis. That drama went on to win the Best First Feature and Robert Altman prizes at the Independent Spirit Awards and Chandor also snagged a Best Original Screenplay Oscar nomination. How to follow-up such success? If you’re Chandor, you make a near-silent thriller, All Is Lost, focused on one man – Robert Redford in one of the great performances of his long career – battling bad luck and the elements in a quest to survive.

“It was just one of four or five ideas that I was batting around,” says Chandor during a Bay Area visit where All Is Lost screened at the Mill Valley Film Festival. “That idea became a snowball rolling down the hill. It started to gather more and more stories and pieces and visual elements. You sort of pick which one to do next based on which one’s got the most momentum.

“The way that I write is I usually see most of the movie first and then over a very short period of time, I put it down on paper. Once I had this one down on paper, it was very specific. I saw the movie from beginning to end and it was a movie that I thought I could make.”

AIL-Credit-Andrew-Illson-00303A

Redford, 76 when the film was shot, plays a man on a solo sail who runs into catastrophe in the middle of the Indian Ocean. A damaged boat and stormy weather transform what was undoubtedly a pleasure cruise into a waterlogged hell.

“It’s all of this world of this earth, but yet water is so foreign,” says Chandor, who got to know the sea well over the course of shooting in the Pacific Ocean and the Caribbean, as well as the manufactured waters of Baja Studios, the world’s largest filming tank. “Humankind over the last 6,000 years has been figuring out how to move around the world using the oceans. In a way, the sailboat had become kind of a relic of that.”

Chandor realized from the beginning that casting would be key to the success of the movie. He knew from the start that the project would only work with an actor of a certain age.

“This move with a 35-year-old, it’s sort of like, ‘Of course, he or she is fighting, they still have 70 years of good living left on the planet. They’d better be fighting,’” he says. “But Redford’s character at this point, that’s what’s so amazing. He’s fighting harder than you could imagine and presumably it’s a pretty significant uphill climb.”

Once he decided that the character called for an older man, the filmmaker was left with a very short list of names. The actor would have to be fit enough to handle the physical requirements of the role, which included climbing a 65-foot mast, lots of swimming and even more demanding stunts that would not be performed by a double. He would also have to be a gifted enough actor that he could hold an audience’s attention and convey what the character is going through without the crutch of dialogue. An outdoorsman all his life as well as a skilled performer, Redford quickly zoomed to the top of Chandor’s wish list.

“He had this perfect balance of a longstanding relationship with the audience with this belief almost that I had that there were a couple of great performances still to give, that he still had a lot to give, which is, I think, why he said yes in a way,” the filmmaker says.

“And then most importantly this kind of knife’s edge balance between being old and so fragile but also still so physically able to pull this off. Really what the film is struggling with is this character kind of coming to grips with the fact that life on earth is finite. The more and more I got into it, it started to be that there wasn’t anybody else to play the part.

“Redford can communicate in-depth thoughts and emotional kind of growth and emotional transitions non-verbally, which is an art form in itself,” he adds. “It’s not just fear or perseverance, but it’s his ability to actually communicate this sort of path from fear to perseverance, which most actors would have trouble with non-verbally. He has that gift.”

With the film about to open in theaters, the writer/director recently re-read his script for the first time in many months and realized how close the film he made came to the one he envisioned as he worked on his screenplay.

“The script is almost identical to the movie we ended up making,” Chandor says. “I just felt that there was something there that was worth telling and it could be a pretty intense emotional ride. I had some family members that thought I was a little crazy in the process of doing it, but it certainly is nice that it seems to be working. It’s exciting that we managed to pull that off.” – Pam Grady

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