LFM Reviews Crime and Punishment, The 80th Anniversary Edition

By Joe Bendel. Raskolnikov is often translated to mean “schism” or “dissent,” which made Dostoevsky’s celebrated anti-hero a fitting role for Peter Lorre to take on soon after he emigrated from National Socialist Germany. While Lorre had an affinity for the existential literary source novel, the part would also foreshadow the psychopaths and villains that would become his stock-and-trade. Mill Creek Entertainment celebrates the eightieth anniversary of Josef von Sternberg’s Crime and Punishment with a special DVD reissue, on-sale today.

It was eighty years ago when Crime and Punishment first released in theaters, but you probably thought it wasn’t a day over seventy-five. At least eighty is a reasonably round number. Frankly, any excuse to watch a Peter Lorre film is valid and this is a rather interesting one his fans may not be so familiar with.

Roderick (as he is here known) Raskolnikov is indeed a brilliant intellectual, with Nietzschean ideas about crime and morality. He is too perversely proud to accept help from his college friend Dmitri, opting to murder a parasitic pawnbroker instead. In a departure from the novel, he will not be interrupted in the act by the loathsome woman’s sister, but he still loses his superhuman cool, rushing off without most of the crone’s money.

Much to his surprise, Raskolnikov’s guilty conscience immediately troubles him. It only gets worse when an innocent man is arrested for the crime. Nevertheless, he instinctively shifts into defensive mode when the intrepid Inspector Porfiry calls for him, again and again. Ostensibly, the copper seeks Raskolnikov’s consultation as a brash young criminology theorist, but it is clear he suspects the poor garret-dweller. Raskolnikov becomes increasingly isolated and alienated, yet the fallen but still devout Sonya persistently offers him spiritual comfort during some of his darkest hours.

All things considered, the 1935 Crime and Punishment is surprisingly faithful to Dostoevsky, including the various subplots involving Raskolnikov’s sister Antonya. Still, Sternberg reportedly never liked the film due to distinctly un-Russian flavor, references to Siberia notwithstanding. However, the film’s ambiguous setting gives it a timeless universality that was arguably ahead of its time. Lucien Ballard’s black-and-white cinematography is also quite striking at times, especially for its use of shadows and reflections.

From "Crime and Punishment."

Regardless, everyone knows the reason to see C&P is to watch Lorre do his thing. Of course, at the time nobody knew how many twitchy villains he would play. In retrospect, C&P looks like something of a fork-in-the-road film, where his future Joel Cairos and Corman Poe madmen branch off from his Brechtian collaborations. He also happens to be terrific as the increasingly agitated Raskolnikov, particularly in his nifty cat-and-mouse scenes with the under-appreciated Edward Arnold. As Porifry, Arnold looks like Broderick Crawford, but acts like Colombo. The haunting Romanian Tala Birell further contributes to the film’s continental flavor as the exquisitely tragic Antonya.

It is hard to envision the 1930s studio system truly plumbing the existential depths of a tortured Nineteenth Century Russian crypto-anarchist, but thanks to Lorre’s bold performance, Sternberg’s adaptation makes a pretty good go of it. Lorre fans will enjoy it for all the reasons they relish his classic films co-starring opposite Sydney Greenstreet. Affectionately recommended for classic film buffs, Crime and Punishment is now available on DVD as part of Mill Creek Entertainment’s Anniversary series.

LFM GRADE: B+

Posted on September 15th, 2015 at 10:27pm.

LFM Reviews Veteran

By Joe Bendel. Seasoned Detective Seo Do-cheol served as a technical advisor to a TV cop show, but he is not about to go Hollywood. Frankly, he is too undisciplined for any sort of corruption. While he is no end of headaches for his frustrated wife and task force leader, he is the last cop any bad guy would want on his case. A coked-up sadistic corporate heir will learn that the hard way when he messes with a friendly acquaintance of Seo’s (Hell yes, that’s all it takes) in Ryoo Seung-wan’s Veteran, which opens this Friday in New York, after laying a smackdown on this year’s TIFF.

After busting a high-end car theft ring Det. Seo and team leader Oh are poised for national promotion. Of course, the car thieves did not give up without a fight, but that was A-OK with Seo. If he can keep quiet for next month or so, he’ll be moving on up. Unfortunately, he meets the reprehensible Jo Tae-oh at a party for the TV show he basically lent his name to. Watching his abusive behavior towards women rubs the cop the wrong way. When he subsequently learns the truck driver he contracted during the stolen car sting tried to commit suicide at the Sunjin Group, Jo’s perennially under-investigation conglomerate, Seo launches a personal investigation.

Apparently, Bae Cheol-ho and his driver colleagues were fired by a Sunjin holding company for joining a union. Since said union is nowhere to be seen, it is safe to say Bae’s dues were not well spent. Regardless, when Bae crashes the corporate office seeking the wages owed him, Jo humiliates him, forcing him to box the thuggish manager Jeon, who pink-slipped him. Needless to say, the bout does not go well for Bae. In fact, he throws himself down the Sunjin stairwell, ending up in a coma rather than the morgue. Unfortunately, the case is not in Seo’s jurisdiction, but he is not about to let bureaucratic niceties dissuade him. Jo and his chief fixer, VP Choi Dae-ung play hardball, but they keep misunderestimating Seo’s obstinate tenacity.

Despite the somewhat clichéd class warfare themes (seriously, whatever happened to that disappearing union?), Veteran is a rock’em sock’em action film that benefits from its comparatively narrow scope and proletarian sensibility. Seo and Jo just really, really do not like each other. That builds mucho anticipation for their climatic face-off, which pays off nicely.

From "Veteran."

Hwang Jung-min is perfect as the rough-edged, slightly eccentric Seo, taking the maverick cop to a whole new level of unruliness. Yoo Ah-in is just okay as Jo, a standard issue villain whose likes we have often seen before, but Yu Hae-jin is terrific as his calculating right-hand Choi. Oh Dal-su largely keeps the shtick in check as the put-upon team leader, but Jin Kyung (his co-star in the even more awesome Assassination) really makes an impression in her brief but meaningful appearances as Seo’s less-than-amused wife Joo-yeon. Rather inexplicably, Ma Dong-seok (a.k.a. Don Lee) also has a fleeting cameo as a stationary store owner, but he’s still pretty cool.

Although Veteran is not as smart and stylish as Ryoo’s The Berlin File, he still delivers plenty of satisfying action. Its grunginess and contempt for authority are both good things. Recommended for fans of hardnose cop movies, Veteran opens this Friday (9/18) in New York, at the AMC Empire.

LFM GRADE: B+

Posted on September 15th, 2015 at 10:27pm.

LFM Reviews Uncle John

By Joe Bendel. It turns out people do not know everybody’s business in small towns. After having visions of Hell Fire, Old Dutch set out to make amends with everyone he wronged, but his confessions have shocked the rural community. Apparently, this is particularly true of Ben’s Uncle John. Although we do not see how the fatal chain of events transpired, there is no question the titular carpenter is disposing of Dutch’s body in the opening scenes of Steven Piet’s Uncle John, which opens this Friday in New York.

He might be a murderer (manslaughter seems the more fitting charge), but John is not a bad sort, really. In fact, he is a salt-of-the-earth kind of guy according to Ben. As part of his pseudo-courtship of a new co-worker, the Chicago-based web designer explains how Uncle John raised him after his mother died and his father absconded.

As Ben hesitantly puts the moves on Kate, we see John scramble to cover his tracks and deflect the suspicions of Dutch’s delinquent younger brother Danny Miller. Fortunately, the sheriff does not share Miller’s line of thinking, but he keeps popping by at inopportune moments. However, Uncle John will really have to start tap-dancing when Ben brings Kate home for a spur-of-the-moment visit.

At first glance, Uncle John looks like two completely different films—Fargo in Wisconsin and About Last Night in Chicago—stuck together by a mere familial connection, yet somehow Piet makes it click. Partly that is because we get a powerful sense of how important the characters are to each other, even when living miles apart, but there is also a hard to define atmosphere of unease permeating the entire film. Whatever it is, it just works.

Of course, it is no secret how much John Ashton brings to the film as Uncle John. Best known as Sgt. Taggart in the Beverly Hills Cop franchise, Ashton has worked steadily in the industry for years, but with Uncle he finally gets a career-defining role. He flat-out knocks it out of the park with his quiet, slow-boiling performance. At times, you can practically see the steam rising from his head, as Uncle John struggles to keep it together. Alex Moffat and Jenna Lyng are also charismatic and develop convincing ambiguous chemistry together, but they would probably be the first to admit Ashton is leading this parade.

As strong as the cast is, they cannot do their thing in a vacuum. Fortunately, Piet has a pitch-perfect understanding of the upper Midwest as a geographical place and a state of mind. Frankly, Uncle John looks and feels more genuine than obvious comparative films like Fargo, Blood Simple, A Simple Plan, and A Single Shot. He also shows an unusual keen intuitive sense of how much to reveal and when. It is a strangely effective thriller precisely because it is not compulsively thrillerish. Highly recommended for fans of small town noirs, Uncle John opens this Friday (9/18) in New York, at the Village East.

LFM GRADE: A-

Posted on September 15th, 2015 at 10:26pm.