Showing posts with label Rob Reiner. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rob Reiner. Show all posts

Sunday, August 4, 2013

The Auteur of A Few Good Men

A Few Good Men is one of the best military courtroom dramas, this is both entertaining and captivating. Blah, blah, blah. But I want to talk about the auteur of this and other films.

At the beginning of his directing career, Rob Reiner had a run of films that the greatest of directors would have been proud of: This is Spinal Tap, The Sure Thing, Stand By Me, The Princess Bride, When Harry Met Sally, A Few Good Men and Misery. While some might disagree about which films are best, it must be admitted by anyone that this is an amazing run.

And honestly, Reiner did this without any fancy tricks, with average camera work and without a common artistic vision. Each film is excellent in their own ways, with excellent performances, but why did Reiner get this run? What skill did he have to make such a superior set of entertaining films?

I think I've discovered his secret-- he was able to spot superior scripts and he had the talent to make those scripts shine. This is Spinal Tap was just a free-for-all of comic geniuses. What Reiner showed in that film was his superior comic timing, which he used in his later films as well. But he was guided by scripts by Goldberg, Ephron and Arron Sorkin, telling stories by Stephen King (one of two directors that made adaptations King strongly approved of).

The timing was strongly evident in A Few Good Men, but more so is the script. It is paced out perfectly, and these great roles, put in the hands of a cast that reads like an Oscar night, couldn't go wrong. All Reiner had to do is to set it up and let it roll like the play it was.

Yes, Nicholson was superior and all the other performers were fantastic in this film. The beats were perfect and Reiner knew how to produce them. But the real star here is Sorkin. This isn't a West Wing episode, but it has the same sharp wit, the same interaction between characters, the same jaunty-but-talented nature of its center role. And it builds up to a crescendo, just like the best West Wing episodes, that Sorkin does so well.


In the case of this film, as well as The Social Network, Moneyball, Charlie Wilson's War and others the true auteur is Sorkin.   We can't get the sense of the superior script from just a few quotes, but here we go:
This code of honor of yours makes me want to beat the shit out of something!

Sherby, you gotta trust me, you keep your eyes open and your chances of catching ball increase by a factor of 10.

Clearance code? I don't have a clearance code. Do you have a clearance code?

These two Marines are on trial for their lives. Please tell me their lawyer hasn't pinned their hopes to a phone bill.

For my part, I've done as much as I can to bring the truth to light. And the truth is this: Your son is dead for only one reason. I wasn't strong enough to stop it.

How did you know where the mess hall was if it's not in this book?

I need my bat. I think better with my bat. Where's my bat?

My hat is off to you, Mr. Sorkin, sir.

Saturday, December 1, 2012

Is True Love Worth It? (The Princess Bride)


81. The Princess Bride (1987)

Sonny, True Love is the greatest thing, in the world-except for a nice MLT – mutton, lettuce and tomato sandwich— where the mutton is nice and lean and the tomato is ripe…” -Miracle Max

Not once in the midst of the Princess Bride, do we get a definition of True Love.  Nor do we see it in action, unless True Love is found in uncontrollable passionate kissing.

But we see the consequences of True Love.

Let’s just take Westley for example (spoilers ahead for both of you who haven’t yet watched the film).  For the sake of True Love,  he leaves the only home he knows, is attacked by Rodents of Unusual Size, drinks poison, becomes a pirate,  climbs a cliff, defeats a master swordsman, defeats the brute squad while paralyzed, and dies. 

You know, I don’t think that The Princess Bride is the best advertisement for True Love.  Seems to me that this nebulous idea causes an untold amount of suffering. 

Yet, oddly enough, like Fred Savage, I am strangely attracted by this odd mystery.  After all, if someone is so willing to suffer for something I do not understand, perhaps I too would like to hear more about those kissing parts.  There’s got to be something to it.

The Princess Bride is based on a novel by William Goldman where he recounts his rediscovery of the fictional S. Morgenstern classic The Princess Bride, which was primarily a political satire, but Goldman re-edited it so only the "good parts" were left.  If you loved the movie, you'll love the book just as much.