Reel 74: The Wages of Greed

Sure, Gordon Gekko told us all that greed, for lack of a better term, is good. And that film sometimes takes the blame for a bunch of unfortunate things that took place in the 1990s.

But there are films out there which note that there’s a darker side to greed (and, to be fair, Wall Street also carries that message; it’s just that people kind of overlooked that part). And in this episode, we look at a pair of films which are years apart from a production standpoint, but whose characters are more or less contemporaneous.

We start with The Treasure of the Sierra Madre (1948), starring Humphrey Bogart, Tim Holt, and Walter Huston and directed by Walter Huston. Anjelica Huston isn’t in this one because she wasn’t born until 1951, I guess. The trio star as three down-and-out Americans who pursue gold in a remote mine in which others have given up hope. They face all kinds of hardships moving to and from the mine, and there are plenty of adventures in between.

From there we go to another film set at about the same time, but on this side of the US/Mexico border, in the American southwest. There Will Be Blood (2007), directed by Paul Thomas Anderson, stars Daniel Day-Lewis as a man who is determined to amass as much as he can, but it’s far too late when he realizes the price he pays for his success.

Both of these films also have the distinction of being source material for memes and pop culture gags. With Sierra Madre, of course, it’s assorted variations on whether or not any stinkin’ badges are necessary, and in Blood it’s the phrase “I drink your milkshake.” In both cases I’d be willing to bet all the money in my pockets (nearly 80 CENTS, friend) that most people don’t know the source material for either of them.

Finally, before I set you free to listen to the episode (because of course you’ve been riveted to this poetry I’ve been cranking out so far), I offer you this bit of music that we talked about during Part 2:


Yes, I will expect you to send me Thank You notes for bringing this music into your life.

COMING ATTRACTIONS: 

Next time, we stick with the Old West with a pair of films that use that genre as an allegory for anti-Capitalist messages. (What?) Don’t worry; it’ll make a lot of sense before we’re through. First we’ll see McCabe and Mrs. Miller (1971), followed by The Claim (2000). Join us, won’t you?

 

Reel 56: Only Connect

See? Weren’t you promised an episode with this title a while back? We do the fan service pretty well, methinks. (Also, I don’t have an especially good reason for it, but I kind of like the artwork on this episode.)

This time around, “Only Connect” is a rather ironic title, because the films we’re looking at deal with many, many missed connections between people and events.

In the first film, Exotica (1994), Atom Egoyan takes us through a pair of parallel stories, plus a third storyline that actually manages to tie the other two together, even though (spoiler) it’s not concurrent with the other two. In this case the connections are there and it’s up to the viewer to pick up the breadcrumbs left behind.

After the intermission, we’re going to Turkey to see The Edge of Heaven, a 2007 Turkish-German drama written and directed by Fatih Akın. This one will have you confused at first. Then, as the various pieces come together, you’ll get frustrated. But ultimately you’ll settle in and accept the way events worked out. (I think; that’s how it worked out for me, anyway.)


COMING ATTRACTIONS:

Put on your rented tuxedo, because we’re going to a couple of weddings. First, from 2001, it’s Monsoon Wedding, an Indian comedy-drama directed by Mira Nair. Although it takes place in India, you’ll recognize most of the drama that happens when extended families find themselves in one place.

From there we’re off to Denmark and 2007’s After the Wedding, a 2006 Danish-Swedish drama directed by Susanne Bier. It’s a complex story about people with complex motivations, and the people affected by them.