IS JOLIE THE NEXT STANWYCK? AND WHY DID SHE FOLLOW AN OSCAR WITH 'TOMB RAIDER'?Byline: Rob Lowman Entertainment Editor While watching the DVD DVD: see digital versatile disc. DVD in full digital video disc or digital versatile disc Type of optical disc. The DVD represents the second generation of compact-disc (CD) technology. of ``Lara Croft: Tomb Raider,'' which comes out today, with my headphones Head-mounted speakers. Headphones have a strap that rests on top of the head, positioning a pair of speakers over both ears. For listening to music or monitoring live performances and audio tracks, both left and right channels are required. on so as not to disrupt the household with sounds of gunfire and explosion, my wife interrupted to ask a question. As I took off the headphones, we found ourselves watching the silent screen while we talked, drawn - not by the special effects special effects, in motion pictures, cinematographic techniques that create illusions in the audience's minds as well as the illusions created using these techniques. or the action - but by the magnetism of Angelina Jolie. Obviously more than a pretty face - an Oscar already to her credit - Jolie is one of the few actresses today that can command the screen the way stars of the '40s like Barbara Stanwyck and Ingrid Bergman once did. It's no accident that I bring up those names. Remastered versions of Alfred Hitchcock's ``Notorious'' (1946), starring Bergman and Cary Grant Noun 1. Cary Grant - United States actor (born in England) who was the elegant leading man in many films (1904-1986) Grant , and Preston Sturges' ``The Lady Eve,'' (1941) starring Stanwyck and Henry Fonda, have been recently released on DVD. Of course, Stanwyck and Bergman didn't need to draw guns or do high-wire stunts like Jolie did in ``Tomb Raider,'' though Stanwyck did use a well-turned ankle to trip up Fonda's character, a rather awkward bachelor of inherited wealth Noun 1. inherited wealth - wealth that is inherited rather than earned wealth, wealthiness - the state of being rich and affluent; having a plentiful supply of material goods and money; "great wealth is not a sign of great intelligence" , Charles Pike (``Hopsie''), who spends his time studying snakes. Stanwyck plays Jean Harrington, the daughter of card sharp `'Colonel'' Harrington (the great character actor Charles Coburn). The pair are traveling on an ocean liner when it stops to pick up Hopsie, who has been ``up the Amazon for a year.'' At first, the pair sees only a mark; the colonel goes after him with cards, Jean with her feminine wiles wile n. 1. A stratagem or trick intended to deceive or ensnare. 2. A disarming or seductive manner, device, or procedure: the wiles of a skilled negotiator. 3. Trickery; cunning. . There is one scene early on that is one of the most delicious in the history of film. In it, Hopsie sits on the floor while Jean reclines on the couch On the Couch is an Australian television program formally broadcast on the Fox Footy Channel and it focuses on the current issues in the AFL. This is now broadcast on Fox Sports after the closure of Fox Footy Channel. The show airs on Monday night and is hosted by Gerard Healy. , snuggled snug·gle v. snug·gled, snug·gling, snug·gles v.intr. 1. To lie or press close together; cuddle. 2. up against the bedazzled bachelor while she babbles about sweet nothings sweet nothings pl.n. Endearments addressed to a lover. Noun 1. sweet nothings - inconsequential expressions of affection; "he whispered sweet nothings into her ear" honeyed words . The uninterrupted single-frame shot lasts for three minutes and 51 seconds, an eternity in film time, before Jean sends the by-now-intoxicated Hopsie on his way. It doesn't get sexier than that. Jean actually begins to fall for the clumsy guy, but Hopsie, after falling himself, rejects her after finding out about her past. To get even, she creates a second persona, the Lady Eve Sidwich, a British cousin, and begins her seduction all over again. ``The Lady Eve'' is a meditation on love and sex and identity - and is immensely funny. Much of that is owed to Stanwyck's brilliant performance. Stanwyck plays more than just Jean and Eve, an American and a Brit. She's a woman who's tough and vulnerable, down-to-earth and flighty flight·y adj. flight·i·er, flight·i·est 1. a. Given to capricious or unstable behavior. b. Characterized by irresponsible or silly behavior. 2. Easily excited; skittish. , seductive and in love, and often you can see all of that roll by as Stanwyck flashes from one identity to another. The actress, who died in 1990, often played roles in which she was tough but had a heart of gold. Despite some magnificent performances (``Meet John Doe John Doe formerly, any plaintiff; now just anybody. [Am. Pop. Usage: Brewer Dictionary, 329] See : Everyman ,'' ``Golden Boy,'' ``Stella Dallas,'' ``Double Indemnity''), Stanwyck never won an Oscar until she was awarded an honorary one in 1982. But as ``The Lady Eve,'' she turned in a performance for the ages. By the time she made ``Notorious'' for Hitchcock, Bergman had already won a best-actress Oscar for ``Gaslight'' in 1944. Like ``Eve,'' Bergman's role in ``Notorious'' required her to be more than one woman. She plays Alicia Huberman, a loyal American who is the daughter of a convicted Nazi spy. The stigma has turned her to drinking and promiscuity Promiscuity See also Profligacy. Anatol constantly flits from one girl to another. [Aust. Drama: Schnitzler Anatol in Benét, 33] Aphrodite promiscuous goddess of sensual love. [Gk. Myth. , ``a loose woman,'' as it was termed. Her circumstances and connections to her father's Nazi friends make her the perfect candidate for recruitment when an American spy agency wants to infiltrate a Nazi organization that has sprung up in South America after the war. But because she has fallen so far, the agency believes she will need a reason to risk her life. Cary Grant, playing American agent T.R. Devlin, is then essentially ordered to seduce her in order to make her agree to the assignment. As the picture was made in 1946, the filmmakers had to tiptoe around this without being explicit, but you get the picture. Once Alicia is ``seduced'' - falling madly in love with Devlin - she is sent to Rio to insinuate in·sin·u·ate v. in·sin·u·at·ed, in·sin·u·at·ing, in·sin·u·ates v.tr. 1. To introduce or otherwise convey (a thought, for example) gradually and insidiously. See Synonyms at suggest. 2. herself into the household of the Nazis' ringleader ring·lead·er n. A person who leads others, especially in illicit or informal activities. ringleader Noun a person who leads others in illegal or mischievous actions Noun 1. , Sebastian (Claude Rains), who has been in love with her. Once she's there, she must appear to care about Sebastian, which includes sleeping with him (once again, off camera). Meanwhile, Devlin has distanced himself from her (a loose woman, he is reminded), which is like a dagger to her heart. (If this plot sounds familiar, ``Mission: Impossible 2'' used more or less the same gambit.) Bergman's Alicia must live a double life - not just as a spy, but emotionally as well. Bergman, of course, had experienced this dual existence before as Ilsa in ``Casablanca,'' where she was married to a resistance hero fighting the Nazis but loved a tough, seemingly amoral a·mor·al adj. 1. Not admitting of moral distinctions or judgments; neither moral nor immoral. 2. Lacking moral sensibility; not caring about right and wrong. nightclub owner. Both of these heroines are less than perfect, vulnerable, emotional, but willing to go for it. ``The Lady Eve'' and ``Notorious'' are great films, of course; despite being made for mass audiences, they still incorporated complex ideas into their stories. What they have in common is that both Jean and Alicia are real heroines you can root for - despite - and because of -their shortcomings A shortcoming is a character flaw. Shortcomings may also be:
Jolie's Lara Croft is based on a heroine from a video game, and the filmmakers did little to add any depth to Croft, emotional or otherwise. Instead it's gunfire, special effects and butt-kicking; that's the nature of Hollywood. But one thing that Ang Lee's ``Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon'' taught us is that you can have both depth and action. It's unfortunate that in Jolie's three films since she won the Oscar for best supporting actress in ``Girl, Interrupted,'' she has gone from being eye-candy (``Gone in 60 Seconds''), to being silly and boring (``Original Sin'') and a caricature (``Tomb Raider''). Those may all be poor choices by Jolie, but looking around at the current fare being turned out by Tinseltown, she may not have had many choices. This begs the question: When will we see real film heroines again and not cartoons? < ``Lara Croft: Tomb Raider'' (Paramount) is priced for rental on VHS (Video Home System) A half-inch, analog videocassette recorder (VCR) format introduced by JVC in 1976 to compete with Sony's Betamax, introduced a year earlier. and is $29.99 on DVD, which includes cast and crew interviews, featurettes on Jolie training for the role; a look at stunts and special effects; an examination of the Tomb Raider video-game phenomenon; four deleted scenes; U2's music video, ``Elevation''; and DVD-ROM DVD-ROM: see digital versatile disc. A read-only DVD disc used to permanently store data files. DVD-ROM discs are widely used to distribute large software applications that exceed the capacity of a CD-ROM disc. features. ``The Lady Eve'' (Criterion) is $39.95 on DVD, which includes commentary by film scholar Marian Keane; a new digital transfer; an introduction by writer-director Peter Bogdanovich; and the 1942 broadcast of the Lux Radio Theater adaptation, performed by Stanwyck and Ray Milland. ``Notorious'' (Criterion) is $39.95 on DVD, which includes commentary by Keane; a new digital film and sound restoration; the 1948 Lux Radio Theater adaptation, starring Bergman and Joseph Cotten; script excerpts of deleted scenes and alternate endings; excerpts from the short story ``The Song of the Dragon,'' source material for the film; and newsreel footage of Bergman and Hitchcock. CAPTION(S): photo Photo: Angelina Jolie followed her Oscar win with a romp as the title heroine in ``Lara Croft: Tomb Raider,'' now on video and DVD. |
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